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Monday, November 2
 

9:00am EST

Charleston Seminar: Acquisitions Bootcamp
REGISTER NOW!

Registration Cost: $225

Presented in conjunction with UNC Chapel Hill School of Library and Information Science. 


This seminar will offer an intensive one and one-half day (all day Monday, half day Tuesday) boot camp on acquisitions from three different perspectives: public services, technical services, and the vendor side.  The major emphasis is on the nuts and bolts of the acquisitions process from selecting materials, especially e-books, to assessing collections and articulating the return on investment to the parent organization (academic/special/public libraries).  Using an interactive hands-on approach, with case studies, small group discussion, and best practices attendees will gain pragmatic knowledge they can apply in their home institutions. This class is ideally suited for librarians new to selection and acquisitions workflows.

Topics:


  • Collection  Management Overview

  • Budgeting

  • Assessing User Needs

  • Selecting Materials

  • Acquisitions Workflows

  • Negotiation Strategies

  • Assessment of Collections

  • Collaboration with other libraries

  • Print Materials

  • Media

  • E-Resources

  • Marketing / Outreach

  • Preservation

  • Legal Issues / Intellectual Freedom

  • Ethics

  • Communication /  Collaboration-Public Services v.s. Tech Services


Speakers
avatar for Megan Kilb

Megan Kilb

E-Resources Librarian, UNC-Chapel Hill
avatar for Rebecca Vargha

Rebecca Vargha

Head, Information and Library Science Library, UNC Chapel Hill
Rebecca Vargha is Librarian, School of Information and Library Science (SILS) at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill since 2001. Her responsibilities as head of this library include collection development, staff supervision, liaison with departmental faculty and the central... Read More →


Monday November 2, 2015 9:00am - Tuesday November 3, 2015 12:00pm EST
TBA
 
Tuesday, November 3
 

9:00am EST

An Introduction to Library Research Data Management Services
REGISTER NOW!

Cost: $159 for ALCTS members, $225 for non-members.

Offered in partnership with ALCTS:

Data are a core research output.  Scientific and scholarly communities, research funders, universities, and policy makers are recognizing the importance of and addressing challenges related to organizing, describing, sharing, and preserving borne digital data.  Increasingly, academic libraries and librarians are contributing to efforts to address these challenges.  This panel workshop will offer attendees a thoughtful, interactive, and actionable introduction to building and delivering research data management services.  Attendees will learn about the primary activities and importance of data management across the scholarly lifecycle; the policies, trends, and technologies affecting researchers and the organizations that support them; and, the expertise, staffing, and resources libraries must consider when building successful and sustainable services.

Speakers
avatar for Jennifer Doty

Jennifer Doty

Research Data Program Manager, Emory University Libraries
Jennifer Doty is the Research Data Program Manager at Emory University Libraries. She has a BA in Education from the University of Arizona, and a MSI in Library and Information Services with a Graduate Certificate in Spatial Analysis (GIS) from the University of Michigan. Jen's role... Read More →
avatar for Christopher Eaker

Christopher Eaker

Data Curation Librarian, University of Tennessee
Christopher Eaker is Data Curation Librarian at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville (UTK), Libraries. He is interested in scientific data curation and in integrating sound data stewardship skills into science and engineering curricula. Christopher helps UTK’s researchers navigate... Read More →



Tuesday November 3, 2015 9:00am - 12:00pm EST
TBA

9:00am EST

Charleston Seminar: Acquisitions Bootcamp (Day 2)
This session is a one and one-half day event, running from 9:00 am to 4:00 pm on Monday, 11/2, and from 9:00 am to 12:00 pm on Tuesday, 11/3.

REGISTER NOW!

Registration Cost: $225

Sponsored by ACSESS (Alliance of Crop, Soil, and Environmental Science Societies). Presented in conjunction with UNC Chapel Hill School of Library and Information Science. 


This seminar will offer an intensive one and one-half day (all day Monday, half day Tuesday) boot camp on acquisitions from three different perspectives: public services, technical services, and the vendor side.  The major emphasis is on the nuts and bolts of the acquisitions process from selecting materials, especially e-books, to assessing collections and articulating the return on investment to the parent organization (academic/special/public libraries).  Using an interactive hands-on approach, with case studies, small group discussion, and best practices attendees will gain pragmatic knowledge they can apply in their home institutions. This class is ideally suited for librarians new to selection and acquisitions workflows.

Topics:
  • Collection  Management Overview
  • Budgeting
  • Assessing User Needs
  • Selecting Materials
  • Acquisitions Workflows
  • Negotiation Strategies
  • Assessment of Collections
  • Collaboration with other libraries
  • Print Materials
  • Media
  • E-Resources
  • Marketing / Outreach
  • Preservation
  • Legal Issues / Intellectual Freedom
  • Ethics
  • Communication /  Collaboration-Public Services v.s. Tech Services

Speakers
avatar for Megan Kilb

Megan Kilb

E-Resources Librarian, UNC-Chapel Hill
avatar for Rebecca Vargha

Rebecca Vargha

Head, Information and Library Science Library, UNC Chapel Hill
Rebecca Vargha is Librarian, School of Information and Library Science (SILS) at the University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill since 2001. Her responsibilities as head of this library include collection development, staff supervision, liaison with departmental faculty and the central... Read More →



Tuesday November 3, 2015 9:00am - 12:00pm EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

9:00am EST

Charleston Seminar: Legal Issues in Libraries
Beyond Bright Lines:  (or, Things librarians didn't know they need to know about the law, but they really do!)

REGISTER NOW!


Registration Cost: $225

Presented in conjunction with UNC Chapel Hill School of Library and Information Science. 


Librarians are faced with legal issues every day but, without knowing what to look, for it can be easy to miss or misunderstand them.  Conventional wisdom that offers easy answers can be tempting but may provide a false sense of security.  Even worse, by trying to follow rules we don’t really understand, we may unnecessarily impede the library’s ability to do good work.  Through a series of discussions and group activities, this day-long session, will prepare librarians to make informed, thoughtful decisions in key legal areas that are becoming ever more crucial in institutional settings, including:

1.  Information Ownership and Mission.  Who owns instruction-centered materials (syllabi, online courses, student notes, etc.)?  What is the statutory baseline behind licenses?  What about intellectual property beyond (c) - patent, trademark, and tech transfer?  How should we think about what we have vs. what we own - repositories, research data, and meeting funder mandates?

2.  Security, Equal Treatment, and Liability in Libraries.   What are emerging legal standards for safety and freedom from harassment?  What is our employment liability?

3.  Privacy and Disclosure:  How can we come to a better understanding of FERPA, HIPAA, and other regulations?  What's happening about confidentiality and data security?

4.  Accessibility, Lawsuits, and VPATs.  Given ADA, OSHA, and disability requirements, how can we make physical spaces accessible?  In this context, how should we think about websites and other online services?

5.  Horizon Issues and Uncharted Waters, such as makerspaces, data visualization, digital humanities, and others.  How to navigate and keep up with new guidelines, best practices, documents, cases?  What are effective strategies for risk management?

The session will conclude with a summary of issues that will need further follow-up with professionals, and discussion of how that might follow-up may be better achieved. 

Moderators
avatar for Ann Okerson

Ann Okerson

Senior Advisor, Center for Research Libraries
Throughout my work at the Yale University Library and also the Center for Research Libraries, the opportunities and challenges facing international librarianship have had a compelling interest for me.  For 25 years, I've also worked on these issues through participation in IFLA (the... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Will Cross

Will Cross

Director, Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy, North Carolina State University
Will Cross is the Director of the Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy at N.C. State University where he guides policy, speaks, and writes on copyright literacy and open knowledge. He recently served as a Hewlett-funded Open Education Fellow and as an instructor for... Read More →
avatar for Kevin Smith

Kevin Smith

Director of Scholarly Communications, Duke University
As Duke University’s first Director of Copyright & Scholarly Communications, Kevin Smith’s principal role is to teach and advise faculty, administrators and students about copyright, intellectual property licensing and scholarly publishing.  He is a librarian and an attorney... Read More →


Tuesday November 3, 2015 9:00am - 4:00pm EST
TBA

1:00pm EST

Charleston Seminar: Understanding the Library Market
REGISTER NOW!

Registration Cost: $149

Attention publishers and vendors of library-related materials: new for the 2015 Charleston Conference, we have a Charleston Seminar workshop just for you! We’ll discuss how to target libraries that will buy your publications, making your marketing budget effective, improving your understanding of the library market, and using library associations to focus your spending. Learn from veterans in the field how libraries buy, who are the library buyers, and how purchasing decisions are made. You can’t afford to miss out on this workshop focused on the library market at the premier international annual library conference focused on book, serial, and electronic resource acquisition. All the major decision makers will be there, and so should you!


Tuesday November 3, 2015 1:00pm - 4:00pm EST
TBA
 
Wednesday, November 4
 

7:00am EST

Registration Check-In
Please check in upon arrival to receive your name badge and attendee materials. Name badges will be required for entry into conference venues, the reception, and conference shuttles.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 7:00am - 7:00pm EST
Upper Lobby, Francis Marion Hotel

9:00am EST

Assessment and Academic Library Value
Registration Cost: $110

This panel workshop features academic librarians with expertise in assessment and demonstrating value/impact on items of institutional importance. Consisting of representation from a mid-sized regional comprehensive university, doctoral institutions, and a large-scale regional comprehensive, discussion items for this preconference will include ALA’s Assessment in Action program, methods of assessing student learning, and demonstrating library value to university administration. Participants in this hands on workshop session will learn techniques for creating assessment programs at their own institutions, as well as practical advice on setting up and monitoring such a program. 

Moderators
avatar for Cris Ferguson

Cris Ferguson

Dean Of Libraries, Murray State University

Speakers
avatar for Carrie Donovan

Carrie Donovan

Assistant Dean for Research & Instruction Services, Ferris State University
Carrie Donovan is Assistant Dean for Research & Instruction Services at Ferris State University’s Ferris Library for Information, Technology & Education where she oversees and coordinates the research and teaching functions of the library, as well as the user engagement and user... Read More →
avatar for Ashley Ireland

Ashley Ireland

Dean, University Libraries, Murray State University
Ashley Ireland became Dean of Libraries at Murray State in 2015. Before that, she served as the Sciences and Agriculture Liaison Librarian at Murray State before becoming the Director of User & Instruction Services in 2012. She received her Bachelor's degree from Murray State University... Read More →
avatar for Adam Murray

Adam Murray

Dean & Associate Professor, James Madison University: Libraries & Educational Technologies
avatar for John Watts

John Watts

Head, Knowledge Production, University of Nevada Las Vegas


Wednesday November 4, 2015 9:00am - 12:00pm EST
TBA

9:00am EST

Defining a Discovery Role for Your Library: An Ithaka S+R Workshop on Evidence-Based Decision-Making
Registration Cost: $250 (Discounted rate of $125 available for Ithaka S+R Survey Participants)

Discovery is a core library activity that has changed dramatically in recent years. Search has moved well beyond the library catalog and A&I services to include not only consumer offerings and index-based discovery services. And traditional techniques for maintaining current awareness of the research literature are giving way to a variety of personalized anticipatory services.  It is a good moment for libraries to take stock of accomplishments and to ensure that wise investments are being made in support of a realistic vision for the library’s changing role, as Roger Schonfeld argued in a recent Ithaka S+R issue brief.

In this workshop, Roger will help academic and research librarians grapple with how to make strong decisions about the library’s role in support of discovery at their institutions.

Topics will include:

* Using evidence to grapple with how the library’s discovery role is changing

* Developing organizational structures and decision-making frameworks for making effective decisions about the library’s vision for its discovery role

* How to balance collaborations and vendor contributions against the need to have a solution that works best for your institution

Participants will benefit from this workshop by improving their ability to incorporate evidence into decision-making processes about the library’s role in discovery.

Prior to the event, we will ask all registrants to complete a worksheet enabling us to maximize the value of our time working together in person.

Speakers

Wednesday November 4, 2015 9:00am - 12:00pm EST
TBA

9:00am EST

Developing a Weighted Collection Development Allocation Formula
Registration Cost: $110

This practical workshop is geared toward librarians who are looking for ways to optimize their limited collection development budgets and/or are revisiting their allocation procedures with an eye toward distributing funds more equitably to each subject area.

Bailey and Creibaum will address the process of creating a weighted allocation formula similar to the one used at Arkansas State University and will introduce attendees to the skills and resources used in managing their own Excel spreadsheet-based allocation formula.

The use of weights applied to each factor is a central feature of this formula. Factors can include the number of degrees awarded in each program, departmental semester credit hour production, the number of faculty in each department, and the average cost of resources in each discipline, among others.

Participants who bring their tablets or laptops will be able to download and work with a fully functioning “lite” version of the Excel formula during the session.

The presenters will demonstrate how the basic formula can be modified to utilize the criteria relevant to each institution. Real-time examples will be used to show how seemingly small changes in the formula can produce major changes in results.

Speakers
avatar for Jeff Bailey

Jeff Bailey

Library Director, Arkansas State University
A native of Dayton, Ohio, Jeff Bailey was appointed Director of the Dean B. Ellis Library of Arkansas State University in 2012 after leading the library for three years in an interim capacity. In his academic library career, Jeff has held positions in both public and technical services... Read More →
avatar for Linda Creibaum

Linda Creibaum

Acquisitions and Serials Librarian, Arkansas State University
Linda Creibaum is Acquisitions and Serials Librarian at Arkansas State University, where for the last 15 years she has been fascinated at the change in library resource formats and the nature of the “problems” she solves in her work day. Linda has worked in a variety of library... Read More →


Wednesday November 4, 2015 9:00am - 12:00pm EST
TBA

9:00am EST

E-Resource Management
Libraries and librarians are being pressured to work smarter and more efficiently. How does one manage the library's resources when we are adding new faculty, new courses, increasing numbers of students, and we are told cut our materials budget?

Upgrade your experience by learning some approaches from your colleagues and sharing your experiences at this interactive session. We will focus on set up, access, technology, delivery, and organizational constraints.


Wednesday November 4, 2015 9:00am - 12:00pm EST
TBA

9:00am EST

How to Use Altmetric Data for Impact Assessment: An Interactive Workshop
Registration Cost: $110

Institutions and researchers are facing increasing pressures from management, funders, and governmental reviews to demonstrate impact and engagement beyond academia. While demonstrating this impact continues to be challenging, the growth of online scholarly communication combined with advancing technologies offer us the ability to understand the reach and impact of research in ways that were never before possible.

In this hands-on workshop, we’ll explore how Altmetric tools can be used to analyse data such as mainstream media mentions, cites in policy documents, blogs, and social media in order to garner a much richer picture of the eventual outcomes and impact of research.  The session will be focused on the data, data sources, and strategies for investigating complex impact questions.

The session will cover the following topics and activities:


  • Explanation of Altmetric data, how it is collected and how it should & should not be interpreted

  • Activity to demonstrate the ways in which researchers, librarians, and research administrators can use the Altmetric application in their work activities.

  • Demonstration of how attendees can perform detailed and extensive analyses by making use of data exports or the Altmetric API.

  • Review different ways to integrate altmetrics into your institution’s existing platforms.


Note: Individuals will be asked to bring their own laptops and to set up a trial account of the Altmetric platform in advance.

 

Speakers
avatar for Sara Rouhi

Sara Rouhi

Director of Engagement & Advocacy for Altmetric and Dimensions, Digital Science
Sara Rouhi is Director of Engagement & Advocacy for Dimensions with responsibility for education and outreach in the US and Canada for both Digital Science’s new Dimensions platform and Digital Science’s alternative metrics company, Altmetric. She... Read More →
avatar for Colleen Willis

Colleen Willis

Senior Librarian, Impact Services & Business Development, National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine
Colleen Willis is a Senior Librarian, at the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. She is the project lead for the Library Impact Services, marketing and business development. She also teaches professional workshops for staff.


Wednesday November 4, 2015 9:00am - 12:00pm EST
TBA

9:00am EST

Resources for Everyone: Challenges and Opportunities in Producing Learning Resources for Users of All Abilities
Registration Cost: $110

Licensing, marketing, access to digital scholarship, end users, innovation – these are terms which are inextricably linked to the world of the 21st century research libraries. Understanding diverse user experiences and developing new ideas and transparent approaches in serving these users brings new dimensions to the world of libraries. The following session is comprised of multiple speakers who are able to offer attendees a unique kaleidoscope glimpse into the diverse world of library users with print disabilities, incorporating technology demonstrations, a review of national and international legislative guidelines, and user input. This session will also offer the opportunity for the audience to raise valuable questions in a free-form forum style format, engaging with speakers and library patrons to tackle valuable topics of digital and print format accessibility and opportunities for libraries and publishers to grow in this area.

Lightning Talks (1hr)

  • 1 person on (US) accessibility/legal context (CSU)

  • 1 person (CAN) accessibility/legal context

  • 1 person on Marrakesh

  • 1 person research library context (US)

  • 1 person research library context (CAN)



Technology showcase + User Perspective (1hr)


  • Faculty and students talking about digital books

  • (presentation format + technology demo)


 

Moderators
Speakers
MC

Margaret Camp

Director of Disability Services, ADA Coordinator, Division of Student Affairs, University of South Carolina Upstate
CI

Charlotte Innerd

Head, Collection Development and Acquisitions, Wilfred Laurier University
avatar for Binky Lush

Binky Lush

Manager, Discovery, Access and Web Services, Penn State University
Discovery, Access and Web Services at the Penn State University Libraries
KC

Kathryn Cornell Webster

Student, Wake Forest University


Wednesday November 4, 2015 9:00am - 12:00pm EST
TBA

9:00am EST

Streaming Video in the Academy
Collection development and selection, technical services and workflows, pedagogy and assessment

As more and more academic libraries are offering streaming video for the development of online courses and use in course management systems, this pre-conference will provide an overview of the implementation, integration and use of streaming video in the academic library collection.  Key issues and best practices will be addressed. This pre-conference is intended for librarians who would like to learn more about setting up a streaming service, selection, technical services, workflows, and the use of streaming video.

 

Speakers
avatar for Lindsay Barnett

Lindsay Barnett

Acquisitions and Electronic Resources Manager, College of Charleston
avatar for Howard Burton

Howard Burton

Host and CEO, Ideas Roadshow/Open Agenda Publishing
Howard Burton, the founding Executive Director of Perimeter Institute for Theoretical Physics in Waterloo, Ontario, has extensive experience in communicating sophisticated ideas to students and to the general public. He holds a PhD in theoretical physics and an MA in philosophy. Since... Read More →
avatar for Christine Fischer

Christine Fischer

Head of Technical Services and Associate Professor, UNC Greensboro
avatar for Audrey Powers

Audrey Powers

Associate Librarian, University of South Florida
I am an Associate Librarian at the University of South Florida. Currently, I work with students and faculty in The College of The Arts, but in my former life I was a Science librarian. These very different roles have provided me with the unique opportunity to work with researchers... Read More →


Wednesday November 4, 2015 9:00am - 12:00pm EST
TBA

9:00am EST

Citation Analysis: How and Why
Registration Cost: $150

Analyzing citations from publications or coursework can help librarians measure how well they are meeting patrons’ needs, educate subject liaisons about the behaviors of their user groups, and reveal information needs that the library is not meeting. This hands-on workshop will combine technical instruction in using MS Access for data collection with a collaborative discussion of how citation data can meet participants’ goals. In addition to creating a blank Access database customized to their own goals, participants will review sample data from the presenter’s institution and discuss what it means for the library.

In the morning, we will create a collective list of possible goals, which will guide the design of the Access database. In the afternoon, we will do calculations using the presenter’s data. This step involves querying the database and exporting the results to Excel. We will also discuss possible interpretations of the findings. No experience with database design is needed, as the workshop leader will walk attendees through the steps of designing a relational database. Some knowledge of Excel is expected, though not necessarily experience with formulas. Handouts will be provided so participants can continue to build their citation databases after returning home.

NOTE: Participants will be required to bring their own laptops. 

Speakers
avatar for Karen Kohn

Karen Kohn

Collections Analysis Librarian, Temple University



Wednesday November 4, 2015 9:00am - 4:00pm EST
TBA

10:30am EST

Refreshment Break
Join us for a light refreshment break to celebrate the opening of the Vendor Showcase! Visit booths and browse while you eat. Food and beverage stations will be scattered throughout the Showcase and provided for preconferences scheduled at the Courtyard Marriott as well.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 10:30am - 11:00am EST
Francis Marion Hotel

10:30am EST

Charleston Vendor Showcase
Don't miss Charleston's only day of exhibitors. Browse the latest products and services, talk with reps, see demos, and snag cool freebies. We can't wait to see you there! Booths will be throughout the Mezzanine Level in the Carolina Ballroom, pre-function areas outside the ballroom, the Calhoun Room, the Pinckney Room, and on the second floor in the Gold Ballroom.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 10:30am - 6:00pm EST
Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Now Playing-Demand Driven Video Streaming Across Libraries
Consortial and demand driven programs are becoming well established in academic libraries for many resources. However, as the use of streaming video snowballs in academia, could these two purchasing models be effectively extended to this medium?

In mid-2014, a pilot project spearheaded by the NY 3Rs Association and with participation from 8 New York State public and private academic libraries was launched to seek an answer this exact question. The colleges – all of varying sizes and profiles – collaborated to design and launch the first ever consortial demand driven pilot for streaming video in the world with Kanopy, a video streaming vendor with an unique Patron-Driven-Acquisition program for online video.

At the core of the pilot were a number of very important questions: (1) could we effectively coordinate collaborative decision-making with such a diverse profile of colleges involved?; (2) how could we best manage issues of fairness when dealing when such varying institutions and when size and budget may have no correlation to usage?; (3) how might the use of film across campuses differ from the use of ebooks and other resources in a group context; and (4) would the usage profile across the campus lead to better overall economics and outcomes than if each of had “gone solo”?

The project yielded many successes and challenges, fascinating cross-campus comparisons, and illuminating insights that will play a significant role in informing the structure and design of consortial programs into the future. Attendees will hear how statistics, teaching faculty input, and the profile and administrative structure of the participating libraries guided the design and decision-making under the program, as well as the key outcomes of the project.

Speakers
avatar for Tom Humphrey

Tom Humphrey

Director of Sales & Strategy, Kanopy
avatar for Sheryl Knab

Sheryl Knab

Executive Director, Western New York Library Resources Council (WNYLRC)
Sheryl Knab is the Executive Director for the Western New York Library Resources Council (WNYLRC) one of 9 Reference and Resources Councils (NY3Rs) chartered in New York State under the New York State Library. WNYLRC is a multi-type consortium with 63 member public and school libraries... Read More →
avatar for Caryl Ward

Caryl Ward

Head of Acquisitions, Binghamton University (SUNY)
Caryl Ward is Head of Acquisitions at SUNY’s Binghamton University, responsible for the purchase of books and continuing resources in all formats. She has experience as a subject librarian for Comparative Literature, Romance Languages, and Latin American and Caribbean Area Studies... Read More →


Wednesday November 4, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

12:00pm EST

Vendor Showcase Lunch
Lunch is provided for all preconference attendees and Conference registrants on the showcase floor. Food and beverage stations will be scattered throughout the exhibits in the Francis Marion Hotel.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 12:00pm - 2:00pm EST
Francis Marion Hotel

1:00pm EST

Deep Dive into KBART
Registration Cost: $110

Calling all content providers!  Do you want create KBART compliant metadata files, but don’t know where to begin?  Are you looking to upgrade your metadata from the KBART Phase I to the new KBART Phase II requirements? If you answered ‘yes’ to either of these questions, then this workshop is for you.

Join members of the KBART (Knowledge Bases and Related Tools) Standing Committee as they guide you through the ins and outs of the KBART Phase II Recommended Practice. Through classroom instruction and hands-on experience, the workshop will provide in-depth coverage of all KBART data elements, with special focus on many of the most frequently asked questions about the recommended practice. The session will also outline the steps in the KBART adoption process and highlight the benefits of endorsement. Participants will also gain insight into how the provision of standardized metadata can increase exposure of their electronic content, ensure smoother interoperability with knowledge base and link resolver vendors, and ultimately improve end user access. Don’t be afraid to take the plunge and see what KBART can do for you!

Target Audience: This workshop is targeted primarily at content providers and individuals responsible for supplying data to knowledgebases and link resolver vendors.  They are first step in the data supply chain; the KBART Recommended Practice is geared towards this group specifically.

Speakers
avatar for Marlene van Ballegooie

Marlene van Ballegooie

Metadata Technologies Manager, University of Toronto
Marlene van Ballegooie is the Metadata Technologies Manager at the University of Toronto Libraries. She received her MISt degree from the Faculty of Information Studies, University of Toronto. At the University of Toronto Libraries, Marlene is responsible for managing the Metadata... Read More →
avatar for Ben Johnson

Ben Johnson

Provider Relations Engagement Manager, Ex Libris, a ProQuest Company
Ben has been working with content in the ProQuest/Serials Solutions products for over a decade, and Ex Libris products since their acquisition by ProQuest in late 2015. He has participated in all things KBART since 2012, including two years as former co-chair of the KBART Standing... Read More →
avatar for Noah Levin

Noah Levin

Co-chair, NISO KBART Standing Committee, Independent Professional
Noah Levin is the Co-Chair of the NISO KBART Standing Committee and a member of the KBART Automation Working Group. Noah has spent the last 20 years designing and creating metadata workflows for large Academic and Trade Publishers; managing their Link Resolver/Discovery data, MARC... Read More →
SM

Sheri Meares

Sr. Director, Knowledge Base, EBSCO Information Services
GP

Gary Pollack

Gale, Cengage Learning
avatar for Kristen Wilson

Kristen Wilson

Project Manager / Business Analyst, Index Data
I work with libraries to design and build open source software. I'm also VP/president-elect of NASIG.
avatar for Julie Zhu

Julie Zhu

Senior Manager, Discovery Partners, IEEE
Julie Zhu cultivates and manages effective working relationships with Discovery Service, Link Resolver, Proxy Service and Search Engine providers to maximize IEEE content findability, visibility and accessibility in multiple discovery channels. She serves in NISO’s Information Discovery... Read More →



Wednesday November 4, 2015 1:00pm - 4:00pm EST
TBA

1:00pm EST

Dismantling the Stumbling Blocks that Impede Researchers’ Access to E-Resources: An Ithaka S+R Workshop on Evidence-Based Decision-Making
Registration Cost: $250 (Discounted rate of $125 available for Ithaka S+R Survey Participants)

Academic and research libraries typically allocate the vast majority of their materials budgets to licensed e-resources. As usage has shifted toward these digital collections, researchers’ expectations for accessing them are being set not by improvements relative to the past but rather by reference to consumer internet services. Off-campus and mobile users face especially difficult challenges. Instead of the rich and seamless digital library for scholarship that they need, researchers today encounter archipelagos of content bridged by infrastructure that is insufficient and often outdated, as Roger Schonfeld argued in a recent Ithaka S+R issue brief.

In this workshop, Roger will help academic and research librarians consider steps they can take to improve access to licensed e-resources for their user communities.

Topics will include:


  • Using evidence to determine the extent of the problem among various user populations

  • Developing organizational structures and decision-making frameworks that recognize users’ changing workflows

  • Implementing acquisitions policies that foreground the importance of access

  • Providing infrastructure and systems that foreground the importance of access

  • How to balance collaborations and vendor contributions against the need to have a solution that works best for your institution


Participants will benefit from this workshop by improving their ability to identify and serve changing researcher expectations for access.

Prior to the event, we will ask all registrants to complete a worksheet enabling us to maximize the value of our time working together in person.

Speakers

Wednesday November 4, 2015 1:00pm - 4:00pm EST
TBA

1:00pm EST

Driving Your Data: Visualizing Your Usage Data to Show the Value of the Library
Registration Cost: $110

The first half of the preconference will feature a discussion of how to conduct a data audit to help librarians consider the variety of information they can collect—or already do—to comprehensively evaluate collections and services. Attendees will be encouraged to consider alternative data along with traditional vendor provided statistics, such as Google Analytics for website traffic, and/or circulation, instruction and other public services statistics. This will be followed by a discussion of how to identify campus priorities for assessment, with reflective activities to help align library goals to their institution’s mission and vision.

Following the break will be a demonstration and hands-on workshop featuring various visualization tools available to convert statistical data into visually compelling presentations.  All attendees who register in advance will be asked to bring a laptop, and will be learn to use a selection of visualization tools to create graphical representations of data, including freely available resources, commonly used productivity software (such as Excel), and specialized tools (such as Tableau). Attendees will be invited to bring samples of their own institutions’ data if they would like, but sample datasets of a variety of types of data will be provided as well.

NOTE: Participants will be required to bring their own laptops.

Speakers
avatar for Alison Bradley

Alison Bradley

Director, Strategic Initiatives, PALCI
avatar for Beth Martin

Beth Martin

Head of Assessment, UNC Charlotte
ES

Elizabeth Siler

Collection Development Librarian, UNC Charlotte
I am currently the Collection Development Librarian at UNC Charlotte. I manage the acquisition and decision making process for both our print and electronic materials as well as managing the budget. I am especially interested in textbook affordability and open access publishing as... Read More →


Wednesday November 4, 2015 1:00pm - 4:00pm EST
TBA

1:00pm EST

Negotiating with Vendors
Registration Cost: $110

The introduction of digital content created a new link in the information chain: the license. Almost every librarian responsible for arranging electronic access to information has had to review or negotiate not just prices but contractual terms, adding hours — sometimes frustrating hours at that — to the process of buying materials. But few have legal training, and most non-sales people haven’t spent a lot of time thinking about what underpins successful negotiations.

Negotiating with Vendors brings together librarians and vendors to help you prepare for these discussions. You’ll come away with a better understanding of what is involved in negotiating, why licenses matter, and how to use them to safeguard your rights and ensure that both party’s obligations are made clear. Some of the dizzying legalese will come into focus, and armed with fresh insights you’ll be able to approach license discussions with less anxiety and doubt.


Wednesday November 4, 2015 1:00pm - 4:00pm EST
TBA

2:30pm EST

Refreshment Break
Join us for a light refreshment break during the Vendor Showcase! Visit booths and browse while you eat. Food and beverage stations will be scattered throughout the Showcase and provided for preconferences scheduled at the Courtyard Marriott as well.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 2:30pm - 3:00pm EST
Francis Marion Hotel

3:00pm EST

Doin' the Charleston Renaissance: Arts and Literature Walking Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

Broad Street Tours will be offering walking tours again this year.  Lee Ann Bain and Carol Ezell-Gilson will be your guides.  The daytime tours are two hours in length and cover about a mile distance.  

In the early 1900s, Charleston experienced a renaissance fueled by artists, writers, musicians, poets, and preservationists. Alice Ravenel Huger Smith, Elizabeth O’Neill Verner, and Alfred Hutty created lovely intimate scenes of the old city to sell to tourists. Charleston’s Poetry Society, one of the first of its kind, was formed in 1920. Dubose Heyward collaborated with George Gershwin to transform his novel Porgy into the opera “Porgy and Bess”. Jenkins Orphanage jazz bands played in the streets of Charleston, then New York and London. The arts brought much needed attention to the rather beleaguered city and lent support to the budding preservationist movement in Charleston. (2 hour tour)

For more information on all tours check out http://broadstreetbiz.com/walking-tours/charleston-conference-2015/.  Tours are $20.00 per person and payment may be made with cash or check at tour time.  Reservations are required as tour groups are limited to 20 people.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 3:00pm - 5:00pm EST
TBA

3:00pm EST

General History Walking Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

Broad Street Tours will be offering walking tours again this year.  Lee Ann Bain and Carol Ezell-Gilson will be your guides.  The daytime tours are two hours in length and cover about a mile distance.  

This tour gives a general overview of Charleston’s history from the colonial era onward – through the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, to the city’s rediscovery and revitalization of the past 40 years. Participants will gain insight into Charleston’s early wealth and culture, viewing the city’s impressive public buildings and private mansions. Visitors will learn of architectural influences and other factors that resulted in modifications to original structures, with explanation of the single house, the double house and dependencies.

For more information on all tours check out http://broadstreetbiz.com/walking-tours/charleston-conference-2015/.  Tours are $20.00 per person and payment may be made with cash or check at tour time.  Reservations are required as tour groups are limited to 20 people.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 3:00pm - 5:00pm EST
TBA

3:00pm EST

Charleston Culinary Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

NEW for 2015! Charleston Culinary Tour

Wednesday, November 4, 2015
3:00 - 5:30 PM
Cost: $60 per person
Limited to 28 people; first come, first served.

REGISTER NOW 


Exclusively for Charleston Conference attendees, this tour of Upper King Street restaurants showcases culinary innovators who exemplify cooking in the New South. The tour visits 3-4 different restaurants and combines elements of an historical tour with a culinary adventure. The food provided represents a broad range of samples of Lowcountry cuisine.

TOUR INCLUDES:

·         All food and non-alcoholic beverage tastings.

·         Enough food to make a meal for most.

PLEASE REMEMBER:

·         Refunds are only available if requested more than 24 hours in advance.

·         Tours are held rain or shine.

·         These are walking tours, and historic Charleston has a number of very uneven cobblestone streets and sidewalks. Please wear comfortable shoes and clothing.

Register now or through the link on the conference attendee registration form. Please contact Audrey Powers with questions: apowers@usf.edu.

 

Moderators
avatar for Audrey Powers

Audrey Powers

Associate Librarian, University of South Florida
I am an Associate Librarian at the University of South Florida. Currently, I work with students and faculty in The College of The Arts, but in my former life I was a Science librarian. These very different roles have provided me with the unique opportunity to work with researchers... Read More →

Wednesday November 4, 2015 3:00pm - 5:30pm EST
TBA

4:30pm EST

Vendor Showcase Reception
Visit the Showcase before it closes and enjoy wine, cheese, and fruit at the reception. The wine bar will be located inside the Carolina Ballroom and Gold Ballroom, but food will be scattered throughout the Showcase floor.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 4:30pm - 5:30pm EST
Francis Marion Hotel

5:00pm EST

Juried Product Development Forums
Advanced Registration Required: Invitations will be emailed to all librarian attendees. If you do not receive your invitation, please contact Caroline Goldsmith (caroline@charlestonlibraryconference.com).

The Forums are focus groups designed for publishers and vendors to gather market input from librarians on the development of a particular product or service, and for librarians to discuss market issues with publishers and vendors invited to participate in a forum.The Forum sessions for librarians are intended for library staff and will be closed to other publishers and vendors. Invitations will be sent to registered library workers by email, and there will be a staffed sign-up table at the Conference for attendees to register on-site. In addition, publishers & vendors may invite their customers to sign up for this event. Distributors, consultants or individuals from other companies will be admitted if the participating publisher or vendor has added their name to the list of attendees for their session.Publishers and vendors have a unique opportunity for feedback from librarians regarding the design, features, feasibility or pricing of a particular product or service that addresses internal debates and shortens the sales cycle.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 5:00pm - 6:15pm EST
TBA

6:00pm EST

Networking Happy Hour
Mix and mingle with other conference attendees over a beverage and a snack while visiting the Poster Sessions. Appetizers will be provided and a cash bar will be available to purchase beverages.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Outside Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Aligning Collections with Emerging Needs in Research Informatics
Some of the NCSU Libraries’ largest investments are in collections, digital library development, and technology-rich collaborative spaces. The goal of the NCSU Libraries Fellows Program initiative, "Aligning Collections with Emerging Needs in Research Informatics," is to ensure these areas leverage one another to the benefit of our users in support of emerging research informatics needs through licensing and acquisition of new data sources, as well as leveraging the capabilities of new high-tech library spaces. Over its two years, this initiative seeks to address and mainstream subject specialists’ and selectors’ consideration of high-tech research informatics needs of users.

This poster session will describe early accomplishments of the initiative, including content mining agreements, increased awareness of scholarly APIs, and an ontology to describe research informatics. The session will also cover ongoing work that includes an investigation of relevant collections, licensing terms, and the landscape of the current marketplace, an environmental scan of NCSU research and teaching contexts that would benefit from greater availability of content as data for computational purposes, “how to” documentation and training for more technologically sophisticated uses of existing resources, negotiations of select licenses to allow for more flexibility of content use, and revision of our website to promote the research informatics capacities of the Libraries’ collections to our users.

Speakers
avatar for Darby Orcutt

Darby Orcutt

Assistant Head, Collections & Research Strategy, NC State University Libraries
I am a librarian, teacher, researcher, and leader deeply interested and involved in interdisciplinary and computational research, the future of higher ed, and cultural aspects of digital transformation.Assistant Head, Collections & Research Strategy, NC State University LibrariesFaculty... Read More →
avatar for Heidi Tebbe

Heidi Tebbe

Collections & Research Librarian for Engineering and Data Science, NC State University Libraries
Heidi Tebbe is the Collections & Research Librarian for Engineering and Data Science at North Carolina State University. She manages collections for subjects including engineering, computer science, physics, astronomy, and data science.


Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Back to the Future: Re-Examining the Need for Shelf-Ready Processes in the E-Book Environment
Objective: Present the methodology, data, and findings of a study Texas Woman’s University Libraries conducted on its shelf-ready and in-house copy cataloging workflow.

Texas Woman’s University Libraries went shelf-ready with Baker and Taylor in 2013 in order to save staff time and money processing firm order print books. We assumed that routine copy cataloging took up a large portion of staff time and was not cost effective. By receiving the bulk of our firm order books “shelf-ready,” cataloging staff would be free to do other tasks and projects.

Questions were raised as we prepared to expand to another vendor: Is the quality of the cataloging and physical processing acceptable? How many and what sort of changes are staff needing to do with these books? How many days from order placement until the item is available? What is the true per book cost? Do we purchase enough print books that outsourcing still makes sense? What other efficiencies or technologies could we capitalize on? In light of these questions, we wanted to compare the two workflows - in-house copy cataloging and shelf-ready before making any additional outsourcing commitments. A two month study tracked all print books received from order to shelf; and a complete cost analysis of the entire acquisitions and cataloging processes was done.

Attendees will learn how one small library rec-examined what has become a common library practice in light of new technologies and reinstate a traditional workflow in order to move to the future.

Speakers
avatar for Susan Martin

Susan Martin

Chair, Collection Development and Management, MTSU James E. Walker Library
Susan Martin serves as the Collection Development and Management (CDM) department chair in the James E. Walker Library, Middle Tennessee State University. She provides leadership for CDM which includes the following units or activities: Acquisitions, Cataloging, Continuing Resources... Read More →



Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

DVD and Streaming Video: Choices for an Academic Library
In 2014 W. M. Randall Library subscribed to a package of streaming videos from Media Education Foundation. We already owned DVDs of 72% of titles in the package but their high circulation rates and faculty requests for streaming access warranted the cost of duplicating the content. One year later we assessed use of the titles in both the DVD and streaming collections. Our presentation will share our findings. The results may push us to change our collection development policy in terms of video format preference, duplication, and access vs. ownership. We will end the presentation with an open conversation with the audience about whether libraries have identified best practices for video selection that can be shared.

Speakers
SB

Susannah Benedetti

Associate Director, Resource Description and Manag, UNCW William Madison Randall Library
JC

Jeanne Cross

Coordinator of Collection Development, University of North Carolina Wilmington


Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Expanding Limits with Get it Now
Objective: As collections evolve from models of access over ownership that incur significant subscription costs to the institution, the library investigated whether unmediated access to the Copyright Clearance Center's GetitNow service would be an alternative method of building our all-electronic collection by providing fast access to needed content that improves customer satisfaction and provides significant cost savings for the institution.

Methods: Library Administration initially picked 103 journals based on faculty recommendations, journal titles requested more than five times within the past two years via ILL, and unsubscribed titles listed as the top 20 subject specialty journals based on impact factors. The titles were added to Serials Solutions Link Resolver to facilitate direct access to content via Citation Matcher and/or PubMed LinkOut. Titles were continuously added from ILL requests exceeding the “rule of five.”

Results: During the first year, 183 requests from 114 unique requestors have been filled from 71 unique titles. 30 feedback surveys were returned documenting the ease and rapid delivery of needed content to support grant proposals, teaching, learning, and patient care.

Conclusions: Preliminary data support the use of GetitNow. Findings revealed the service is a cost-effective extension for burgeoning, all-electronic collections, and for connecting patrons to needed content easily and rapidly, and improving customer satisfaction. The service has also served to aid collection development decisions by documenting requests for content from unsubscribed journals based on actual use.

Speakers
avatar for Jean Gudenas

Jean Gudenas

Head of Collections Management, Loyola University Chicago Health Sciences Library
For the past five years, Jean Gudenas has been the Head of Collections Management for Loyola University Health Sciences Library in Maywood, Illinois. In that time, she has facilitated the transition of a largely print-based collection to a nearly all-electronic collection. Her current... Read More →


Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

From the Ground Up: Notes from a First Attempt at New Collection Building
In 2011, California Baptist University launched a new five-year Master of Architecture (M.Arch) program and the library was tasked with building a 5,000 volume collection to meet National Architectural Accrediting Board (NAAB) criteria within five years. Starting with 1,000 books and $11,000, this is the story of our progress so far: how we got here, what we’ve learned, and our plans for the future.

My objective is to share my first-time experiences building a print and electronic subject collection from very little with a small budget and a deadline, and to discuss the various selection tools and resources I’ve found useful during this process. The audience will be able to ask questions and share their experiences and advice for building new collections, and can expect to learn what building a new subject collection has been like for our library (including budget and holdings/acquisitions statistics) and the various tools and resources that have helped with selection.

Speakers
avatar for Elizabeth Flater

Elizabeth Flater

Collection Development Librarian, California Baptist University



Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Not So Strange Bedfellows: Information Standards For Librarians AND Publishers
As our collections become increasingly electronic, standards play an increasingly important role not only in the work of librarians but also in that of publishers. This session will describe standards and recommended practices that are designed to support the publishing, identification, and retrieval of electronic materials, including KBART (Knowledge Bases and Related Tools), the DOI (Digital Object Identifiers), and EPUB (not an acronym...). What are they, what do they do, how do they relate to the work of a broad spectrum of attendees, and particularly why we should care. The presenters are co-chairs of the NISO (National Information Standards Organization) Content and Collection Management Topic Committee.
The objectives of the session are to demystify the alphabet soup of standards and to highlight practices that will help us to better serve our users. The audience will be encouraged to ask questions and to discuss. Attendees can expect to learn about a focused, relevant set of standards and best practices and how they directly affect the attendees and their work.

Speakers
avatar for Martha  Heyman

Martha Heyman

Executive Director, Metadata Standards and Services, Gale/Cengage Learning
Marti Heyman (MLIS, MBA) is a seasoned professional with over 28 years of experience applying information science principles to diverse business challenges in a variety of industry settings, including manufacturing (DuPont), professional services (Deloitte), enterprise software (Oracle... Read More →
avatar for Betty Landesman

Betty Landesman

Betty Landesman has held positions in technical services and electronic resources management in a variety of academic and special libraries, and is co-chair of the NISO Content and Collection Management Topic Committee with Marti Heyman. She is a long-time Charleston, NASIG, and ER&L... Read More →



Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Planting Scholarly Communication Seeds: Getting Graduate Students Involved in the Cycle
This presentation will be focused on library sessions conducted for a graduate level education course at a large research institution. The sessions which were taught once a year in the spring semester and discussed all things scholarly communication: the open access movement, altmetrics, journal impact factor, and organizational/departmental culture, to name a few. Questions addressed include what do graduate students need to know to participate in this conversation now as they work on their dissertations and in their future as faculty members? Most graduate students are focused on the research and methodology portions of their dissertations, but what if we could shift their perspective to think more about publishing in the digital age? What will they do with their dissertations? What will it look like? How about future publications? The library sessions taught were so successful that a full fledged for-credit course was created in the College of Education for all interested graduate students. Attendees will learn how to approach graduate students with this topic, how to get involved in courses to begin with, and how it can look at your institution. Discussion can be focused around what others have done already or how it can be scaled to any kind of institution. If we want to change the landscape of scholarly communication on college campuses, why not start with graduate students before they become faculty?

Speakers
JM

Jill Morningstar

Organizational Development Coordinator, Michigan State University Libraries
I work primarily with onboarding, mentoring, and retention, and everything in between!


Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Stop, Collaborate and Listen: How the Librarian-Publisher Relationship Can Facilitate the Development of Information Literacy Curriculum
The last decade has seen immense growth in information sources and information output, which in turn has changed the way students and researchers find and use information. Following this, we’ve also seen a shift from the traditional “librarian as expert” role to the “librarian as teacher” role, where the imparting of information literacy skills and their embedding into the curriculum is recognized as a primary responsibility of today’s academic librarian.

This session will explore how librarians are becoming more involved with information literacy curriculum and how publishers can assist them, particularly regarding access to information and the scholarly publishing process.

Rebecca Donlan, Assistant Director for Collection Management at Florida Gulf Coast University (FGCU), will provide an overview of FGCU Scholars: Think-Write-Discover, the university’s new five-year Quality Enhancement Plan for reaffirmation, with information literacy and undergraduate research as a primary objective.

Stacy Sieck, Library Communications Manager at Taylor & Francis, will discuss their existing portfolio of resources aimed at educating students and researchers on issues like how to get published, tips for writing research papers, and more. Stacy will also draw on two Taylor & Francis white papers on facilitating access to information and peer review.

Finally, Becky and Stacy will discuss the information literacy project they’re collaborating on, which focuses on creating a series of webinars and other tools to educate FGCU students and staff on navigating the scholarly publishing process.

Speakers
avatar for Rebecca Donlan

Rebecca Donlan

Assistant Director for Collection Management, Florida Gulf Coast University
Rebecca Donlan is Assistant Director for Collection Management at Florida Gulf Coast University, where she has worked since May 2000.  A graduate of the University of Iowa School of Library and Information Science, she has worked in public and academic libraries since 1990, serving... Read More →


Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Take the NASIG Core Competencies Out for a Joy Ride
This presentation will examine the literature discussing the NASIG Core Competencies for Electronic Resources Librarians (ERLs) and how these competencies are changing the way in which ERLs perform their duties. The presenter will report the results of a pilot project using the NASIG Core Competencies to create professional development activities.

Attendees will be engaged in discussion with the presenter and participate in various polls throughout the session. All participants will gain a better understanding of the NASIG Core Competencies and how they can be used to enhance the skills of library staff and provide better service to library users.

Speakers
SB

Stacy Baggett

Electronic Resources Librarian, Shenandoah University
Stacy Baggett, Electronic Resources Librarian at Shenandoah University in Winchester, VA, manages all aspects of the e-resources life cycle. Her previous experience includes cataloging, strategic planning, and workflow analysis. Stacy holds an M.L.S from North Carolina Central University... Read More →


Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

The Library is our Lab: A Survey of E-Book Use in the Humanities and Implications for Current Collections Development Practice
Humanities researchers consider the library to be their laboratory, and its print collections their essential research equipment. In spite of anecdotal evidence that both students and faculty in the Humanities prefer print materials over e-books, academic libraries are allocating a steadily increasing proportion of their acquisitions budgets toward the purchase of e-books across all disciplines. Likewise, austerity measures have discouraged the practice of ‘duplicate titles’ in library collections.
At Western University in London, Ontario, Peggy Ellis and Fran Gray surveyed Arts & Humanities faculty members and graduate students to gain a better understanding of their attitudes toward e-books. Based on our findings, we are able to identify implications for collections development practice for librarians supporting research and teaching in the Arts and Humanities.

Speakers
PE

Peggy Ellis

Research and Instruction Librarian, University of Western Ontario
Peggy Ellis is an Associate Librarian at The D.B. Weldon Library at Western University. As subject librarian for Modern Languages & Literatures, French, Linguistics and Theory and Criticism, she has taught information literacy and fluency in the Humanities. Her current research interests... Read More →
FG

Fran Gray

Research and Instruction Librarian, University of Western Ontario


Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Weeding Politics-Related Book Collections in Academic Libraries
Many libraries face challenges in accommodating their print collections, whether these challenges are the result of the size and predicted growth of the collection itself or from pressures to use library space for new services. Very little research has been done on how librarians approach weeding within a particular academic subject area, such as political science, and how they apply general weeding plans and criteria to a specific subject. Our presentation reviews findings from a 2015 survey that examines the weeding practices and opinions of academic librarians with responsibility for managing book collections in political science and related disciplines such as international studies, public policy, public administration, and legal studies. Survey topics included motivations for and obstacles to weeding, deselection criteria, and the role of faculty from affected disciplines. Responses to the survey allow us to identify trends in weeding practices, compare perceptions among librarians at different types of institutions, and suggest best practices for political science collection development.

Speakers
avatar for Erin Ackerman

Erin Ackerman

Interim Assistant Director for Public Services, Gitenstein Library, The College of New Jersey
avatar for Lisa DeLuca

Lisa DeLuca

Assistant Dean of Public Services, Assistant Professor, Seton Hall University Libraries
Lisa is a versatile academic library administrator focused collaboration, outreach, and research innovation with students, faculty, key stakeholders, and community. She has a strong ability to identify and manage strategic partnerships, create program management for data initiatives... Read More →


Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

​Excel Tips​ to Make Your Life Easier
This session is for novice and frequent Excel users who may have never taken the time to investigate shortcuts intended to make using Excel more productive. This presentation will demonstrate tips on efficient navigation, formatting, ease in viewing, printing and give other helpful hints. For instance, how do you keep your headers from scrolling off the screen, remove all of the blank cells in your ISBN list or print your column headers on each page? Attendees will also be encouraged to share their helpful hints and hopefully learn a couple of gems that will make Excel more fun.

Speakers
avatar for Michael Winecoff

Michael Winecoff

Associate Dean for Collection Services, UNC Charlotte
I am currently the Associate Dean for Collection Services and oversee Collections and Acquisitions. Before taking this position I gained valuable paraprofessional experience as a copy cataloger, catalog maintenance coordinator and supervisor of the Accounts Payable and Receiving section... Read More →



Wednesday November 4, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

7:00pm EST

Ghostly Stroll Walking Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

Broad Street Tours will be offering walking tours again this year.  Lee Ann Bain and Carol Ezell-Gilson will be your guides.  

Charleston is believed to be a most haunted place. The city has experienced numerous natural and manmade disasters in its long history; stories and legends of great fear, suffering, and death abound. The historic district with hundreds of old buildings provides familiar settings for spirits to revisit and haunt. Charleston, called the “Holy City”, is known for its beautiful historic churches – whose graveyards hold many secrets and horrors. Beguiling tales will take you back to a time when life was tenuous, survival uncertain. Come hear legends from the past and take in the beautiful ambiance of Charleston at night. (1 1/2 hour tour)

For more information on all tours check out http://broadstreetbiz.com/walking-tours/charleston-conference-2015/.  Tours are $20.00 per person and payment may be made with cash or check at tour time.  Reservations are required as tour groups are limited to 20 people.

Wednesday November 4, 2015 7:00pm - 8:30pm EST
TBA
 
Thursday, November 5
 

6:30am EST

"Move a Little, Drink a Latte" 5K or 1 Mile Fun Run
Brought to you by BiblioBoard and HEART

Join your fellow intrepid conference-goers for an early morning jaunt around some familiar Charleston haunts— 5k or 1 mile, run or walk, go the whole distance or just meet for an early coffee — it’s just a loosely organized* chance to get a little fresh air and fresh coffee to complement the conference’s fresh content. 

1K and 5K Maps (PDF Download) 


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:30am - 7:30am EST
Marion Square Park

7:00am EST

Registration Check-In
Please check in upon arrival to receive your name badge and attendee materials. Name badges will be required for entry into conference venues, the reception, and conference shuttles.

Thursday November 5, 2015 7:00am - 7:00pm EST
Upper Lobby, Francis Marion Hotel

7:30am EST

Continental Breakfast
Join us for a light breakfast prior to the morning plenary sessions.

Thursday November 5, 2015 7:30am - 8:30am EST
Outside Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

8:30am EST

Welcome and Opening Remarks
Speakers
avatar for Katina Strauch

Katina Strauch

Founder and Convener, Charleston Conference


Thursday November 5, 2015 8:30am - 8:35am EST
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

8:35am EST

Courtney Young, Head Librarian and Professor of Women's Studies, Pennsylvania State University, 2014-2015 American Library Association (ALA) President
Speakers
avatar for Courtney Young

Courtney Young

Head Librarian and Professor of Women's Studies, Pennsylvania State University
Courtney L. Young, the 2014-2015 American Library Association (ALA) President, is currently Head Librarian and Professor of Women's Studies at Penn State Greater Allegheny.  In 2011, Courtney was named a Library Journal "Mover& Shaker", recognized as a Change Agent for her ability... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 8:35am - 9:15am EST
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

9:15am EST

Star Wars in the Library: Part I (The Revenge of the Jedi) and Part II (The Force Awakens)
Twenty years ago, Jim O’Donnell said that the right model for the next generation of librarianship would be somewhere between James Fenimore Cooper’s Pathfinder and George Lucas’s JediKnight.  Now he has become a next generation librarian himself as director of libraries at Arizona State.  In this talk he will describe what he has found on the new job and outline some provocative strategic directions he proposes for all of us.


Thursday November 5, 2015 9:15am - 10:00am EST
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

10:00am EST

Presentation of Vickie Speck Leadership Award
Speakers
avatar for Katina Strauch

Katina Strauch

Founder and Convener, Charleston Conference


Thursday November 5, 2015 10:00am - 10:10am EST
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

10:10am EST

Refreshment Break
Thursday November 5, 2015 10:10am - 10:20am EST
Outside Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

10:30am EST

Industry Consolidation: 2 Real, Big Examples
During 2015 the library industry has seen continuing consolidation of its suppliers. This panel will include representatives from Ebsco and ProQuest to describe and discuss their recent acquisitions of YBP and Coutts respectively.
In both cases, the acquiring organization is not a print book supplier. What caused these companies to make these acquisitions? What is their vision for serving their customers? What benefits should libraries expect from these acquisitions? And how is it going?
The panel will also include 2 librarian representatives who are customers of Coutts and YBP. How do they see this consolidation? What benefits would they hope to achieve as a result? How is going from the customer’s point of view?
The Charleston Conference has its roots in the relationship between suppliers and the acquisition process by libraries. This panel addresses what appears to be a new phase of consolidation in that process.

Speakers
avatar for Tommy Doyle

Tommy Doyle

Senior Vice President and General Manager of RELX’s Science & Technology Research Reference Business, Elsevier
Tommy Doyle is the Senior Vice President and General Manager of RELX’s Science & Technology Research Reference Business (formerly known as the Science & Technology Books Group). He is responsible for delivering overall performance and ensures the business is positioned for future... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 10:30am - 11:15am EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

10:30am EST

The Secret Life of Articles: From Download Metrics to Downstream Impact
Traditional citation and download metrics have long been the standard by which we measure the use and value of scholarly articles. However, these methods neglect the usage and real-world impact of newer technologies to access, store and share downloaded scholarly articles. This session’s speakers will share the results of interviews, focus groups, and an international survey with more than 1000 scholars to investigate the ways in which they now access, store, share and use downloaded scholarly articles. By identifying and measuring what traditional metrics fail to examine, the Beyond Downloads project attempts to capture a more complete picture of the use and value of scholarly articles, which is critical for librarians, publishers and vendors to understand in developing scholarly tools and services. Complete usage can no longer be measured by traditional means alone. The speakers will discuss the findings of their research and the implications for metrics that take into account scholars’ changing access, reading and sharing behaviors.

Speakers
PS

Peter Shepherd

Director, Project COUNTER
avatar for Carol Tenopir

Carol Tenopir

Professor, University of Tennessee, School of Information Sciences
A frequent speaker at professional conferences and prolific author, Carol Tenopir is a Chancellor’s Professor at the University of Tennessee. For the last decade she has served on the Leadership Team of the NSF-funded DataONE project, which has brought together librarians, scientists... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 10:30am - 11:15am EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

10:30am EST

Think like a Start-Up (or an Upstart!)
This session explores start-up mentalities with three candid perspectives from actual start-ups embedded within the library and publishing community. Moderated by Ann Okerson, panelists Peter Brantley (Hypothes.is, NYPL, UC Davis), Franny Lee (newly ProQuest SIPX), and Mitchell Davis (BiblioLabs) will discuss topics such as where they get ideas from, how they think about problem-solving and risk, their approaches on sharing and collaboration, and the effect of speed and nimbleness. They will share experiences about successes, but also about failures and the benefits of taking full advantage of every learning experience. The objective is to highlight and hopefully help attendees identify for themselves opportunities to bring entrepreneurial energy into everyday thinking and actions for libraries.

Moderators
avatar for Ann Okerson

Ann Okerson

Senior Advisor, Center for Research Libraries
Throughout my work at the Yale University Library and also the Center for Research Libraries, the opportunities and challenges facing international librarianship have had a compelling interest for me.  For 25 years, I've also worked on these issues through participation in IFLA (the... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Peter Brantley

Peter Brantley

Director, Online Strategy, University of California, Davis
Peter Brantley (@naypinya) is Director of Online Strategy for the University of California Davis Library. Previously, I was the Director of Digital Development at New York Public Library, and the Director of Scholarly Communication at the open source not-for-profit, Hypothes.is. Currently... Read More →
avatar for Mitchell Davis

Mitchell Davis

CFO, Bibliolabs
Mitchell Davis is a publishing and media entrepreneur. He was the founder in 2000 of BookSurge the world’s first integrated global print-on-demand and publishing services company (sold to Amazon.com in 2005 and re-branded as CreateSpace).   Since 2008 he has been founder... Read More →
avatar for franny lee

franny lee

GM and VP SIPX (Co-Founder), SIPX (ProQuest, Ex Libris)
Franny Lee is GM and VP ProQuest SIPX and leads the team.  Franny is dedicated to harnessing technology to make content, copyright and education more accessible and affordable. She is a frequent speaker and writer on the emerging issues at the intersection of campus needs, libraries... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 10:30am - 11:15am EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

Bringing Some Cents to Collection Development in a Consortial Environment

Academic libraries have traditionally purchased books to support current and future curricular and research needs at their individual institutions. At the same time academic libraries have been challenged in times of static or declining budgets to balance patron demand for access to content against the security of owning collections uniquely tailored to the communities they serve. The costs associated with ownership of many of the same e-book titles combined with the duplication of effort by members of the PALCI consortium led to the development of a shared demand driven acquisition (DDA) model based on patron selection at the point of use. The PALCI DDA program was initially piloted in 2014 with EBSCO, ebrary and YBP, continued in 2014-15 and extended in early 2015 with a JSTOR pilot. The purpose of each pilot was to determine the value of a cooperative DDA model that could eventually replace the need for individual PALCI libraries to manage their own DDA projects, establish cost models that might be equal or lower than traditional ILL, and potentially lower overall costs of acquiring e-book content for member libraries. 

This session will review the value of the PALCI DDA model to participating member libraries; marketing strategies used to gain buy-in from member libraries; the different publisher and aggregator DDA models; the different cost contribution models used to address differences in size of libraries across PALCI and the future of PALCI DDA. The program will be of interest to libraries that are considering or have already implemented DDA, as well as publishers, eBook aggregators, and information vendors. The PALCI consortium includes 69 academic and other research libraries in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia and New York that support teaching and research interests at institutions that range from small colleges to large research universities.

 


Speakers
avatar for Scott Anderson

Scott Anderson

Information Systems Librarian, Millersville University Library
Scott Anderson (MLS, MBA) is an Associate Professor and the Information Systems Librarian at Millersville University. He is responsible for most of the library's electronic services (Discovery, ILS, ILL, KB, repository, linking, etc), configuring content platforms, authentication... Read More →
avatar for Jeremy Garskof

Jeremy Garskof

Director of TS, Gettysburg College
avatar for Chris Martire

Chris Martire

Special Projects Consultant, PALCI
Chris currently serves as Special Projects Consultant for PALCI, a consortium of 68 academic and other research libraries in Pennsylvania, New Jersey, West Virginia and New York. In her previous role as PALCI’s Senior Program Officer, Chris led cooperative print and digital collection... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

11:35am EST

Elements of the Successful IR
It’s recently come to our attention that libraries are struggling with promotion and development of their Institutional Repositories (IRs). More and more colleagues have been contacting us about how we have created and sustained an effective IR program. The SFA Center for Digital Scholarship, only 13 months old, has developed an IR with diverse content incorporating traditional and non-traditional resources combined with multi-media and 3D objects. Achieving this diversity came about through extensive promotion and faculty interaction. This program advancement included customized services, forums, and constant presentation at all levels of the university community. These IR activities have included a focus on student digital humanities classes and projects, as well as faculty eResearch collaborations. The wide variety of content includes open access journals, electronic books, events and conferences, research projects, and art galleries. The entire campus is involved in the IR and attuned to the latest projects. The speakers will describe their strategies for launching the new IR and share the components for ongoing efforts with an IR that is a popular and integral element of university scholarship.

Speakers
avatar for Corrie Marsh

Corrie Marsh

Scholarly Communications & Collections, Old Dominion University Libraries
Corrie Marsh is the Scholarly Communications & Collections at Old Dominion University Libraries. She earned her B.S. at the University of North Texas and her M.S.L.I.S. at Louisiana State University, where she also worked in serials and collection development. Corrie worked in Acquisitions... Read More →
avatar for Dillon Wackerman

Dillon Wackerman

Digital Repository Librarian, Southern Methodist University
Dillon joined the Hamon Arts Library at Southern Methodist University (SMU) in August 2016 as the Digital Repository Librarian, a role that encompasses the dissemination and development of topics and initiatives surrounding digital scholarship and scholarly communication. Prior to... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Faculty and Student Engagement with Streaming Video
In the past 2 years, there has been an explosion of video in higher education, from the use of video in flipped classrooms and MOOC's, in distance education, hybrid classrooms, and even in individual study. This presentation pulls together industry and institution-level studies, as well as international surveys, in-depth focus groups, interviews and institutional case studies with students, academics and librarians. We will discuss the findings on student and faculty engagement with video, present and future, and what it means for libraries.

Speakers
avatar for Beth Bernhardt

Beth Bernhardt

Consortia Account Manager, Oxford University Press/ Previously at UNC Greensboro
Beth works for Oxford University Press as a Consortia Account Manager. Before coming to OUP she was the Assistant Dean for Collection Management and Scholarly Communications at UNC Greensboro. Beth has served as the Principle Program Director for the Charleston Conference since... Read More →
avatar for Mike Eyler

Mike Eyler

Account Executive, Swank
We provides a flexible and custom solution to fit your campus’ needs by streaming films for your Higher-Ed Institution. Select and pay only for the films you need! We have exclusive distribution of thousands of films, making us the largest repository of digital film content to complement... Read More →
avatar for Elisabeth Leonard

Elisabeth Leonard

Senior Field Editor, SAGE Publications


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

From Usability Studies to User Experience: Designing Library Services
User Experience (UX) is high on libraries' agendas today as they strive to make collections discoverable, optimize resource usage, and support users in achieving their academic goals. Intuitive, user friendly discovery services are key to making this happen and therefore, many libraries are performing usability or user studies for their systems and services. This session will provide useful insights into the process for completing such studies, ways to put the results into practice, and user interface and user services design in general.

The session will reflect different viewpoints and discuss the stages of designing a new User Interface. It will showcase expertise in UX in general and focus on real examples from the usability tests and discovery tool implementations of The University of Kansas (KU) and Tulane University and the new User Interface design of Primo (Ex Libris).

The University of Kansas will present the process they underwent in order to engage their library staff with their discovery tool – including a survey with KU librarians comparing Primo to Google Scholar and their favorite databases , the implementation of the suggested improvements to the discovery tool, and a second survey to test the success of their changes.

Tulane University will present the redesign of their Primo User interface, including usability tests, identification of improvement areas, implementation of changes and follow up usage analysis to understand the effect of the changes.

Ex Libris will present the main principles for the new Primo user interface , and discuss benefits of state-of-the-art technologies, such as Angular, when considering re-design and customization of websites and discovery services.

Audience members will be asked to share their experiences and priorities with user services and user interface design.

Speakers
MB

Miri Botzer

Product Manager, Ex Libris
avatar for Lea Currie

Lea Currie

Head of Content Development, University of Kansas Libraries
Lea Currie has been the head of Content Development at the University of Kansas Libraries since 2008 and employed with the Libraries in other positions since 1999. Lea’s principal role in her current position is to manage the collection development budget, review and analyze collections... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

Gathering the Needles: Evaluating the Impact of Gold Open Access content within Traditional Subscription Journals
Investigating the use of gold open access content within subscription content has been a near impossible task until the adoption of the COUNTER 4 statistics in 2014. By reviewing the COUNTER JR1 GOA 2014 reports, two librarians evaluate the gold open access usage at their respective institutions from the following publishers: Elsevier, NPG, OUP, Sage, Springer, Taylor and Francis, and Wiley. This initial investigation will be a benchmark for future studies to see if there is any impact on subscribed content or if usage is limited to non-subscribed content from these providers. Attendees will become familiar with the JR1 GOA reports from COUNTER as well be introduced to new evaluative techniques for hybrid open access content.

Speakers
AB

Alison Bobal

Head, Collection Development and Metadata, University of Nebraska Medical Center
avatar for Jill Emery

Jill Emery

Collection Development & Management Librarian, Portland State University
I am the Collection Development Librarian at Portland State University Library and have over 20 years of academic library experience. I have held leadership positions in ALA ALCTS, ER&L, and NASIG. In 2015, I served as the ALA-NISO representative to vote on NISO/ISO standards on behalf... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Embassy Suites

11:35am EST

Going Local: Creating Unique & Special Collections in an Academic Library
Over the past two years, the University of British Columbia – Okanagan Campus Library has undertaken a review to update their special collections and focus on the local geographical areas and targeted populations. From this, a localized, accessible, and unique collection has emerged that can better serve the students and faculty on campus, as well as community user groups in the area. This project helped to grow the community engagement focused strategic direction of the university and increase the visibility of the library in the surrounding community through building new relationships.
This session will focus on examining the roles libraries can play in developing targeted and focused special collections, drawing from recent experience in reimagining and expanding an existing special collection within a newer academic campus library. It is hoped that this session can spark active audience discussion around the impact special collections can have on the strategic goals of a library or university/college and on the roles and responsibilities academic libraries have in preserving local history.

Speakers
avatar for Arielle Lomness

Arielle Lomness

Interim Associate Chief Librarian, Research & Collections, University of British Columbia



Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Laurens Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Is Inventory Management Worth It? Two Case Studies
Why do an inventory of a library collection? The reasons range from auditing and insurance purposes to having confidence in the records for decision making purposes.  However, the process can be labor intensive and is not without it’s downsides.  There is also some debate about the frequency with which inventory activities need to happen.   In this session, we will examine some of the reasons behind the conduct of inventories in libraries, discuss the pros and cons of doing so, and share the results of two studies.  The first study is a survey conducted at the University of the West Indies Library System.  The UWI is made up of 4 campuses (3 physical campuses based in Barbados, Jamaica and Trinidad and the Open Campus which is online).   Management Audit teams have stressed the need for physical inventories to be done annually to ensure that there is accountability and that book values for insurance purposes are properly matched.  However, the literature has shown that there is a different thinking in some libraries and the survey results will present varying views as well.  The second study is the presentation of an inventory currently in progress at Indiana University.  IU is conducting an inventory of its main library, a collection of over three million volumes, for the first time in a very long time (perhaps ever).  The process and preliminary data will be shared with participants to determine whether an inventory is the right solution at their institution.   

Speakers
JB

Junior Browne

Officer in Charge, University of the West Indies
Junior Browne is currently the Officer-in-Charge, Faculty of Law Library, University of the West Indies, Cave Hill Campus, Barbados. He has served as Acquisitions Librarian and Public Services Librarian and has done a short stint as Head of Cataloguing. His interests are wide and... Read More →
avatar for Sherri Michaels

Sherri Michaels

Head of Collection Management and Director of MDPI Library Operations, Indiana University
Sherri Michaels is currently the Head of Collection Management at Indiana University. She also serves as the Director of MDPI Library Operations. The Media Digitization and Preservation Initiative is a project to digitize media and film by IU's Bicentennial in 2020. Sherri received... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Citadel Green Room, Embassy Suites

11:35am EST

Longitudinal Journal Usage Analysis and the Development of Institutional Specific Core Journals

With flat and declining budgets and the continuous annual inflation, many libraries face an unsustainable collection environment.  Some libraries may need to return to title by title selection which protects disciplinary core journals. Difficulties arise in identifying core journals by discipline as traditionally defined in collection management and assessment as scholarship continues to broaden and diversify. As a result, MTSU librarians have been using a combination of serials usage data and assigned subjects to isolate core journals specific to our academic programs. We have created datasets that include 2012 thru 2014 data as well as Jan – June 2015 usage (annualize) to identify patterns in journal use for our campus.  The result of analysis of this dataset is that we can identify the top used journals per subject over time. The practical implications for collection assessment include creating lists of highly used journals per subject and journals with the lowest use (ranked by subject).

These analyses have already proven useful in identifying areas of high usage in interdisciplinary journals as well as unexpected areas of scholarship (i.e. Medical journals when we do not have a medical school).  We have also used these analyses in accreditation reviews for academic programs and they have led to productive discussions with outside reviewers.


Speakers
avatar for Larry Hansard

Larry Hansard

Assistant Professor, James E. Walker Library, Middle Tennessee State University
avatar for Rachel Kirk

Rachel Kirk

Collection Assessment Librarian, Middle Tennessee State University
I have been an academic librarian since 2002 at Middle Tennessee State University. I have been in the Collection Development & Management department since 2005. I spent 8 years as an Acquisitions Librarian and the last 11 years as the Collection Assessment Librarian. I love to travel... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Rutledge Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Mind the Gap: Find and Fix the Mismatches Between Faculty and Academic Librarians
Meredith Schwartz, Executive Editor of Library Journal, and Jennifer Albers-Smith, Marketing Director, Academic and Special Libraries of Gale Cengage Learning, will co-present key findings from their recent joint study, Bridging the Librarian-Faculty Gap in the Academic Library. Schwartz and Albers-Smith will convene a panel that includes an academic librarian who works on innovative faculty support projects—Will Cross, Director, Copyright and Digital Scholarship of the North Carolina State University Libraries - and a faculty member TBD. Together they will discuss ways to act on the survey’s takeaways and improve connection, communication, and collaboration between faculty and librarians.

Speakers
avatar for Will Cross

Will Cross

Director, Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy, North Carolina State University
Will Cross is the Director of the Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy at N.C. State University where he guides policy, speaks, and writes on copyright literacy and open knowledge. He recently served as a Hewlett-funded Open Education Fellow and as an instructor for... Read More →
avatar for Meredith Schwartz

Meredith Schwartz

Executive Editor, Library Journal
Meredith Schwartz is Executive Editor for Library Journal, and author of the article "Closing the Gap in Librarian, Faculty Views of Academic Libraries."


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

Overcoming the Challenges to Seamless Access to Licensed Content
In a world where there is an increasing expectation that "one click will get you there", this session examines just how difficult it can often be for a researcher to access journal content to which their own institution has a current institutional license, because of inefficiencies in the infrastructure provided by publishers, libraries, aggregators, platform providers, alerting services, discovery services, link resolvers, proxy servers, and authentication systems. These challenges affect users across all types of institutions, and they are growing in importance as online and distance education advances and usage of mobile devices explodes in the shift towards a post-PC environment.

In developing countries these challenges are often exacerbated by additional factors like low bandwidth, but public-private initiative Research4Life has developed a technical solution to at least one of the other challenges. Details of this will be shared along with the implementation hurdles encountered along the way, what Research4Life aims to do to improve its user experience further, and the challenges faced in taking its plans forward.

As library-intermediary-publisher partnerships work to address these issues for more advanced environments, there are opportunities to learn from the needs and plans of developing world initiatives as well.

Speakers
avatar for Richard Gedye

Richard Gedye

Director of Outreach Programmes, STM
RICHARD GEDYE has worked in academic journals publishing since 1986, firstly at Macmillan. In 1991 he joined Oxford University Press where he held a number of positions, including director of sales, marketing, and research. In 2002 he helped found COUNTER, an international organization... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

Shotgun Session
1. Planning Grants: The CliffsNotes Version
Katy Ginanni, Peter Johnson

Library planning grants typically provide funding to engage the services of third-party consultants for a wide range of planning activities. A planning grant is a powerful tool that may be used to assess the need for new services, identify ways to improve existing services, plan library spaces, develop technology plans, or conduct planning to support a larger grant. Perhaps the most valuable outcome of a planning grant is the objective feedback provided by expert consultants; this feedback can be used to justify budget requests for new resources or initiatives to serve library patrons. The presenters will share their experience in developing a proposal for a Library Services Technology Act (LSTA) Planning Grant and the process of administrating grant activities. 

2. Summon, Google Scholar, and the Journey of Discovery : Where do we go from here?
Tracy Gilmore, Cynthia Schwartz

As part of a four year assessment study of the Summon Discovery Service, librarians at Virginia Tech used  a mixed methods approach to gain insight on Summon usage among students and faculty. Our findings show that Virginia Tech students are using Google and Google Scholar in tandem with Summon to discover library content. The reasons are as interesting as they are varied. We will examine what participants shared with us about their use of multiple platforms in lieu of Summon.

The study employed 3 online surveys, 10 focus group sessions, and 8 interviews conducted in 2012 through the spring semester of 2015.  We’ll talk specifically about the methodologies used and our current findings; the recommendations made from our findings; and the changes that were implemented as a result of the study. We will also discuss our rationale, marketing, and promotion of the overall study.

3.Ethnographic Research in Academia: More than just shadowing customers 
Margot Lyon, Maria Stanton, Kate Lawrence

The details of ethnographic user research sound complicated, don’t they? Distilling findings, synthesizing results, modeling after the Six Sigma method – it can sound overwhelming.  But in this session, Kate Lawrence of EBSCO Information Services and Margot Lyon and Maria Stanton of ATLA will break down this research method into digestible bits.
Come hear about the innovative ways their organizations have been observing and understanding the workflow, motivations, and goals of users of diverse library database products.  We will provide an overview of why ethnography differs from other methods and present key findings from various ethnography studies of college students, graduate students and faculty. Panelists will discuss the foundations of ethnography, and provide an overview that empowers attendees to return to their institutions with the skills to conduct a basic ethnographic study. This session will also provide resources and tips on how to get started with ethnographic research in your own environments. 

4. Leveraging Usage Data & User-Driven Development to Extend the Use of Collections 
Kristen Garlock

This session will present a case study that employed usage data analysis and a low-cost rapid development model to build an experimental tool for educators. The rapid development model used for these projects is reproducible and effective, and could be applied to many library-driven efforts. 

In 2014, the JSTOR Labs team used an algorithm to identify more than 9,000 articles on JSTOR that exhibited patterns of use consistent with being used in the classroom or assigned as coursework. Using a rapid development approach called “flash builds,” the team validated and built a prototype browser for this dataset with the direct involvement of teachers at the secondary and introductory college levels. This dataset is now available as "Classroom Readings," a free and open experimental resource. Classroom Readings (http://labs.jstor.org/readings) is designed for educators at the secondary school and college introductory levels and aims to help them quickly and efficiently find articles on JSTOR that are good candidates for teaching. 

While the direct application of Classroom Readings is specific to JSTOR, we believe that libraries have the assets to be similarly successful with this approach. We’ll share our lessons learned and processes that have now been used to create several more added-value tools.
 

Speakers
avatar for EBSCO

EBSCO

EBSCO Information Services
avatar for Kristen Garlock

Kristen Garlock

Associate Director, Education & Outreach, ITHAKA
Kristen Garlock is the Associate Director of Education and Outreach for JSTOR, responsible for education, training, and social media engagement. She has an MILS (1994) from the University of Michigan, and has worked at JSTOR since 1995.
avatar for Tracy Gilmore

Tracy Gilmore

Collections Assessment Librarian, Virginia Tech
Tracy Gilmore is the Collections Assessment Librarian at Virginia Tech University Libraries. She coordinates assessment activities and strategies for developing the library’s digital collections. Her current research interests include discovery service usability, usage, and acc... Read More →
avatar for Katy Ginanni

Katy Ginanni

Acquisitions Librarian, Western Carolina University
Katy Ginanni's jobs in life have included swimming instructor and lifeguard; artist's model; serials acquisitions and electronic resources for several academic libraries; account services, training, and sales manager for a subscription agent; Peace Corps Volunteer; bartender; and... Read More →
PJ

Peter Johnson

Head of Access Services, Western Carolina University
avatar for Cynthia Schwartz

Cynthia Schwartz

Collections Strategies Librarian, Virginia Tech
As part of the Collections team at Virginia Tech, I focus on analyzing and assessing library resources and collections as they serve our institutional research, scholarship, and teaching needs. I also provide strategies for marketing our collections at different levels.
avatar for Maria Stanton

Maria Stanton

Director of Product Management and Production, Atla


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

The Open Movement: What Libraries Can Do
Open approaches have moved beyond open access, open source software, and open courseware to developments with open infrastructure and open processes. But open initiatives tend to be pursued separately by specialist groups, suffering from fragmentation and not having expected outcomes or impact.
The session will provide a simple overarching definition of open resources, and introduce a convenient framework enabling shared understanding of three different types of openness, illustrated by 13 examples of open domains relevant to libraries and information services. It will explain the common attributes, existing synergies, mutual benefits, and natural limits of open approaches, and discuss issues surrounding the development and implementation of policies and strategies to advance the open agenda, including current and prospective roles for librarians and information specialists in promoting openness in education, workplaces, communities, and society. The speaker will present resources and tools developed in her work, which attendees can use to share and compare their own experiences and plans for engaging with open resources and activities.
Attendees will gain a fuller understanding of the concept of openness and its relevance and implications for academic, public, and special libraries, and their parent organizations. They will learn about current developments and future directions for the open agenda, and they will be able to assess and determine their own future roles as educators, advocates, facilitators, collaborators, coordinators, and leaders of the open movement. They will be able to use insights gained from the session to strengthen their positions within their institutions and advance openness in society.

Speakers
avatar for Sheila Corrall

Sheila Corrall

Professor, University of Pittsburgh, Department of Information Culture & Data Stewardship
Sheila Corrall worked in UK public, special, and national libraries in acquisitions, cataloging, reference and information services, before moving into higher education, where she served as university librarian at two institutions and as CIO at a large research university. In 2004... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Tips and Tricks of Incorporating Industry Standards into a Library Collection
Professional literature on the incorporation of industry standards into a library collection is somewhat limited. The objective of this presentation is to discuss the intricate details of acquiring, managing, and delivering electronic industry standards to library patrons in a seamless manner. Lessons learned regarding vendor selection and license agreements will also be discussed. The background information that will be used for this presentation is a case study of a science and engineering library where the collection development librarians analyzed how collection policies can be properly developed to incorporate industry standards into a library setting. A quantitative analysis of the results from a survey administered to the patrons will be used to illustrate the results in combination with a qualitative analysis of the patrons and librarians’ experiences. The key points of acquisition decisions, avoidance of liability issues, and cost will be addressed.

Speakers
avatar for Jennifer Abbott

Jennifer Abbott

Serials/Collection Development Librarian, National Renewable Energy Laboratory
I graduated with a Master of Library and Information Science from the University of Western Ontario in 2009 and have been eagerly engaged in librarianship ever since. I currently hold the position of Collection Development Librarian at the National Renewable Energy Lab in Golden... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Cooper Room, Courtyard Marriott

11:35am EST

Toward Improved ROI: Outcomes of Researching Current Pay-Per-View Practices
This session features the results of the presenters' recent work to create an executive summary of current pay-per-view (PPV) practices, to be published by _Against the Grain_. Building on a talk given at last year's conference on the pros and cons of journal article PPV, the session summarizes the process that was followed and the outcomes that were discovered while writing the summary. PPV options are expanding as is the demand for them, and the presenters outline the current state-of-the art in this area. There are concrete benefits for the PPV approach for many types of libraries, as well as for content providers. Moving in the PPV direction can provide improved user access to content with better ROI on collection dollars.

Speakers
MM

Marija Markovic

Independent Consultant, Acute Source, Inc.
Marija Markovic holds M.S.LIS and M.A. degrees from the University of Illinois. For over a decade, she has worked in the corporate library setting as a copyright compliance expert, contract negotiator for electronic journals and books, and has directed collection development activities... Read More →
avatar for Connie Mead

Connie Mead

Finance and Operations Manager, Operations Group Leader, Wheaton College (IL)
M.B.A. from Loyola University of Chicago. Currently Operations Group Leader at Wheaton College, overseeing all aspects of acquisition, circulation services, and budget. Previously worked 15 years in publishing companies managing and marketing publications. Also lead a social service... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

Video Games in the Academic Library: Wrangling the Rovi Media Collection
The Michigan State University Libraries (MSUL) acquired the Rovi Media Collection in March 2015. This collection includes over 700,000 music CDs, 170,000 DVDs, and over 17,000 video game titles. Such an enormous collection has had a transformative impact on a traditional research library. This presentation gives an overview of the acquisition, housing and administration of this amazing collection, with a particular emphasis on a consideration of the Gaming collection.

With almost no prior institutional experience with video games, the acquisition of the Rovi gaming collection meant that MSUL suddenly became one of the largest of such collections in the country. What considerations were made when we evaluated this collection? How did we involve faculty in the process? Why should libraries collect and preserve video games? And what makes a gaming collection a particular challenge for both librarians and users? As dedicated gaming programs become more prevalent on our campuses, many libraries may become involved in similar considerations and face multiple challenges with preservation, maintenance and use.

Attendees with established gaming collections, and those hoping to establish ones, should come prepared to discuss why this newer media should be a part of library collections, and the challenges that come along with it.

Speakers
avatar for Terri Miller

Terri Miller

Assistant Director for Public Services, Michigan State University


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

11:35am EST

We Are All In This Together
The DPLA is working with community partners to facilitate a national conversation about the challenge of ebooks. This past April a meeting was held in Indianapolis, bringing together a broad range of stakeholders to discuss how can a nationally coordinated strategy effect real change and move us all forward. It was clear that lessons learned through e-resource licensing benefit current patterns of ebook contract negotiation. Drawing on the collective wisdom of experts in both academic and public library communities, we are building a new path forward. A panel will present their ideas, perspectives, and contributions to this national initiative and solicit comments recommendations from the audience. Representatives from DPLA will also give an update on the ConnectEd Open Ebook Initiative.

Speakers
avatar for Rachel Frick

Rachel Frick

Business Development Director, DPLA
Community builder with experience in network building, creative problem solving and outreach. Strong believer in the power of librarians to influence change and build stronger, knowledgeable, empowered communities. Passionate advocate for open culture and it potential transformative... Read More →
avatar for Anne McKee

Anne McKee

Program Officer for Resource Sharing, Greater Western Library Alliance (GWLA)
McKee received her M.L.S. from Indiana University, Bloomington with a very diverse career in librarianship. She has been an academic librarian, a sales rep for two subscription agencies and now a consortium officer for the past 19+ years. A former President of NASIG, McKee is a member... Read More →
VP

Veronda Pitchford

Director, Membership Development and Resource Sharing, Reaching Across Illinois Library System
Reaching Across Illinois Library System


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

What ARE We Thinking? Collections Decisions in an Academic Library
When faced with multiple competing priorities for investment in library resources, there are many important aspects to consider. From student enrollment to prominence of programs, there are both data-driven and intangible factors to weigh. In addition, most library collections now focus on the immediate needs of students and researchers instead of collecting for posterity. This just-in-time versus just-in-case collection development mindset prioritizes different resource attributes and requires an often unfamiliar level of acquisitions flexibility.

Where do we go from here? What are the most important factors to consider before subscribing to or purchasing library resources? What do scholarly publishers believe are the most relevant points to consider when academics make collection decisions?

What attendees can expect to learn?
Participants will learn what librarians should consider when making collections decisions – from the availability of COUNTER statistics to accessibility issues and beyond. The presenters will share a checklist of factors to consider, pitfalls to avoid and how to clearly communicate with our vendor partners. Publishers will learn what really helps academics make collection decisions and share their perspectives.

Speakers
avatar for Natasha Cooper

Natasha Cooper

Collection Development and Analysis Librarian and Subject Librarian for Information Studies, Syracuse University Libraries
Tasha Cooper is collection development and analysis librarian for arts and humanities, as well as some social sciences and professional programs, and subject librarian for information studies at Syracuse University Libraries, in Syracuse, NY.
avatar for Linda Galloway

Linda Galloway

Collection Development and Analysis Librarian, Syracuse University
I'm the STEM collection development and analysis manager and librarian at Syracuse University Libraries. As the subject specialist for chemistry and forensic sciences, I connect students, faculty, and researchers to the best information available. I use data-driven analytics to make... Read More →
avatar for Doug  Morton

Doug Morton

Senior Account Manager, Elsevier
Doug is an Account Manager at Elsevier, a world-leading provider of information solutions that help those in research make better decisions, deliver better care, and sometimes make groundbreaking discoveries in science, health, and technology. Joining the company in 2008, Doug has... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

What Role do Librarians Play in Innovation? An IGI Global Survey on Academic Libraries as Centers for the Advancement of Technology

Traditionally the role of the librarian as an enabler of technology advancement has been underestimated. Almost all innovators—faculty members, students, alumni, and industry professionals—have relied on knowledge assembled from library resources.

Today, more than ever, innovation is needed to fuel the economy. It is clear that advancements in technology specifically, carry the most opportunity to flourish in this ever-changing global economic landscape. From mobile technology breakthroughs to cyber theft, information science and technology issues are a central topic in the public conversation. Policymakers, economists, and other experts agree that in order to assure long-term economic growth, advancements in technology must continue to be significant in coming years.

IGI Global and our librarian advisory board seek to understand how college and university libraries can support technological innovations with an international survey. Findings of the librarian survey will be shared during the presentation and an infographic will be available for participants. The discussion will include profiles and examples of libraries leading technology innovation, including supporting innovation with programming, such as coding, gaming and robotics, and with cutting-edge research.


Speakers
avatar for Cynthia Hart

Cynthia Hart

Oceanfront Area Librarian, Virginia Beach Public Library
With varied experience in administration, supervision and programming, Cindy has worked as a public librarian for more than 30 years in progressively responsible positions with the Virginia Beach Public Library System. For more than a decade, she managed the Library’s intranet and... Read More →
LJ

Lindsay Johnston

Managing Director, IGI Global
Ms. Johnston is currently the Managing Director at IGI Global, an academic reference publisher based in Hershey, Pennsylvania. During her time at IGI Global, she has procured hundreds of titles within five separate imprints and has made significant contributions to content strategy... Read More →
avatar for Audrey Powers

Audrey Powers

Associate Librarian, University of South Florida
I am an Associate Librarian at the University of South Florida. Currently, I work with students and faculty in The College of The Arts, but in my former life I was a Science librarian. These very different roles have provided me with the unique opportunity to work with researchers... Read More →
avatar for Jackie Ricords

Jackie Ricords

Director of E-Resources, IGI Global
Jackie Ricords leads IGI Global’s e-resources and consortia outreach efforts. Prior to joining the STM publisher, she worked in higher education for more than a decade teaching and directing professional development programs for educators. Jackie has expertise in digital resources... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

11:35am EST

Where Do We Go From Here: Choosing a Framework for Assessing Research Data Services and Training
Research data management has become a critical issue for campus researchers, funding agencies, and libraries, who have made substantial investment of time, energy, and resources into support for managing and sharing data. As data management programs proliferate, however, assessment of research data services has become a notorious challenge for libraries. How can we know - and demonstrate - that our efforts are having an impact, and how can we learn to make them even more effective?

In this session, we will present a survey of several frameworks for assessing research data management services. We will lead a discussion about the application of different frameworks for assessing or auditing existing skillsets, external facing services, and capacity to support an array of research data services. This discussion will be grounded in a demonstration of how we applied one framework to audit the NCSU Libraries’ “training ground” model, which serves the dual purpose of developing competencies within our librarians and supporting researchers in their needs to manage, preserve, and share research assets.

Through an active discussion of our efforts, and the efforts of libraries around the world, we can chart a course for effective research data management that can help guide libraries deep into the process as well as those those just getting their feet wet.

Speakers
avatar for Will Cross

Will Cross

Director, Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy, North Carolina State University
Will Cross is the Director of the Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy at N.C. State University where he guides policy, speaks, and writes on copyright literacy and open knowledge. He recently served as a Hewlett-funded Open Education Fellow and as an instructor for... Read More →
avatar for Hilary Davis

Hilary Davis

Department Head, Collections & Research Strategy, North Carolina State University Libraries
Hilary Davis is Department Head, Collections & Research Strategy at the North Carolina State University Libraries in Raleigh, NC. Her primary role is to provide leadership and direction in the Libraries’ overall collection development strategies, and play a leading role in the Libraries... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

12:00pm EST

ProQuest: New Content, New Platform Upgrades, New Experiences
Limited Capacity seats available

Sponsored Luncheon - RSVP Required

Join us as special guest speaker, Peter Brantley, Director of Online Strategy for the University of California Davis Library, presents “A Hollow Sphere: The rise of interactivity and the submergence of publishing.” In this fascinating session, Peter will show us how the act of publishing is becoming less important than creating opportunities for continual engagement. 

Plus, see how you can empower new levels of research and education success with ProQuest via:

  • Major new ProQuest collections and diverse content additions to existing programs — across all disciplines and formats
  • Results of in-depth user research exposing barriers in the research process
  • New Ebook Central demonstration
  • ProQuest platform upgrades and enhancements
  • SIPX, the most complete course materials solution in higher education.

Speakers
avatar for Peter Brantley

Peter Brantley

Director, Online Strategy, University of California, Davis
Peter Brantley (@naypinya) is Director of Online Strategy for the University of California Davis Library. Previously, I was the Director of Digital Development at New York Public Library, and the Director of Scholarly Communication at the open source not-for-profit, Hypothes.is. Currently... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 12:00pm - 1:00pm EST
Stars Rooftop Bar and Grill

12:30pm EST

Integrating Discovery with your Learning Management System
Limited Capacity seats available

Sponsored Luncheon - RSVP Required

Digital textbooks, social media, video content. It seems as if instructors are moving everything into online and hybrid classrooms except for the resources of the library! How can librarians bring the world of quality databases, eBooks, and other digital resources from the library’s discovery system easily and directly into the online learning environment? Why is it imperative that libraries play an increasing role in these learning management systems, and how can we meet the expectations instructors and students have of learning technologies?

This presentation will showcase how a discovery plug-in for learning management systems (e.g., Moodle, Blackboard, Desire2Learn, Sakai, Canvas) adds unprecedented functionality for online course instructors: the ability to create reading lists of library materials without ever having to leave the course site. The plug-in allows instructors to create library reading lists without grappling with permalinks, proxy prefixes, or PDFs, leveraging the value of the library discovery system in a frictionless environment.


Speakers
avatar for Scott Anderson

Scott Anderson

Information Systems Librarian, Millersville University Library
Scott Anderson (MLS, MBA) is an Associate Professor and the Information Systems Librarian at Millersville University. He is responsible for most of the library's electronic services (Discovery, ILS, ILL, KB, repository, linking, etc), configuring content platforms, authentication... Read More →
avatar for Eric Frierson

Eric Frierson

Director of SaaS Innovation, Public & Schools, EBSCO Information Services
Hey! I'm the team lead for library services engineering and integration for EBSCO. This means I can answer any question you might have about integrating EDS or the EDS API into your library and campus. I'm also a developer, building applications that use our API in outside-of-the-box... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 12:30pm - 2:00pm EST
39 Rue de Jean

12:45pm EST

#CRITCHS: Critical Librarianship in Book and Serial Acquisition
The free-form twitter community #critlib was created to host twitter chats about critical pedagogy, but has grown to address a wide variety of issues including assessment, gender in RDA, and many other issues.
This session will provide an introduction to #critlib and critical practice in librarianship, and then focus the discussion on how these practices can apply specifically to acquisitions and related fields.
The session will be highly interactive and engage the audience in discussions such as: how personal identities impact our acquisitions work, the uncomfortable praxis of acquisitions work, and how we can create space for deep and reflective conversations.

Speakers
avatar for Emily Drabinski

Emily Drabinski

Long Island University
avatar for Rachel Fleming

Rachel Fleming

Lead Librarian for Acquisitions/Budget Officer, Appalachian State University
Rachel Fleming is Lead Librarian for Acquisitions at Appalachian State University, where she manages the acquisition of all material types. She has previously served as Serials Librarian at Western Carolina University and Collection Development librarian at Central College in Pella... Read More →


#CRITCHS pptx

Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

12:45pm EST

Big Deal on the Fly: Shoring up the Levee
Keeping up with “Big Deal” journal packages has put a strain on library budgets and the budgetary dikes are leaking. We are all reaching a breaking point, but who can resist the siren’s call of the “Big Deal” packages? This has necessitated libraries to consider multiple options in order to absorb the floodwaters in uncertain times. Two universities will discuss their different approaches in shoring up the levee. While one was able to find a solution through contract negotiations, the other decided not to renew system-wide access to their “Big Deal” journal package.
This discussion will outline several options and strategies in negotiating journal packages, and how to measure the impact at your institution by using statistics from a multidisciplinary database, Interlibrary Loan, and Get it Now to approximate the value and necessity of the big deal subscription. The discussion will also present possible applications for ongoing collection development decisions in an era of unpredictable budgetary tides.

Speakers
EC

Emily Chan

Associate Dean, Research & Scholarship, San Jose State University Library
SD

Susann deVries

Interim University Librarian, Eastern Michigan University
avatar for Susan Kendall

Susan Kendall

Academic Liaison Librarian/Government Publications, San Jose State University
Sue is the coordinator for government publications and liaison to the College of Education.  Research interests include use of electronic government publication, patron driven acquisitions, and affordable learning solutions for students.  Sue has been at San José State since 2000... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Buying and Selling Information for Libraries: What Both Parties Need To Know To Ensure Success
Both sides of the negotiating table are represented in this session led by David Myers, Matt Dunie and Michael L. Gruenberg. All three are well-versed veterans in the art of negotiations in the electronic information field. Both sides of the negotiating table will come away with practical tips and advice that will assuredly make the next buying and selling experience profitable for each.

All information professionals will gain a greater understanding of how to be successful on their next negotiation. Similarly, the salesperson servicing the library market will also gain a greater understanding of how to deal with the librarian so as to ensure success for both parties.

Speakers
MD

Matt Dunie

President, Lab Archives
avatar for Michael Gruenberg

Michael Gruenberg

Consultant, IOS Press
IOS Press serves the information needs of scientific and medical communities worldwide publishing more than 100 international journals and 75 books each year. Featuring the IOS Press Neurodegenerative Disorders Journals Collection: Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease, Journal of Parkinson’s... Read More →
avatar for David Myers

David Myers

Representative - N.A Sales, Bentham Science Publishers
David Myers, President and CEO of DMedia Associates, Inc., is an Information Industry expert, with over 27 years experience specializing in Strategy, Sales, Licensing and Business Development. Throughout his career, he has drafted, negotiated and closed over 500 domestic and international... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

12:45pm EST

Changing Library Operations
The session is an exploration of library operational adaptations to the changing technologies of information distribution and usage. The librarians will present glimpses of the changes occurring in their library operations as they transition to services without print. A panel of librarians will explore, through the evidence of their changing library operations, a range of topics, for example: trends in e-resource ‘acquisition’ and usage; changes in consortia; processing and organizational changes; and developments in open access publishing and library e-publication. After initial presentations, the panel will encourage questions, comments, and discussion with attendees.

Speakers
JD

Jim Dooley

Head, Collection Services, University of California, Merced
Jim Dooley has been head of collections and technical services at the University of California, Merced since 2003.  Prior to coming to UC Merced he held a variety of positions in technical services and special collections at the University of Utah.  He serves on various University... Read More →
avatar for Allen McKiel

Allen McKiel

Dean of Library Services, Western Oregon University
Allen McKiel began his career as a programmer/systems analyst. The merger of his technical skills with librarianship occurred at OCLC and NOTIS. He has over twenty years of academic library experience first as the Director of Libraries for Region 2 of Indiana’s Ivy Tech Community... Read More →
avatar for Robert Murdoch

Robert Murdoch

Associate University Librarian, Brigham Young University



Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Combined Title TBA: Merging 'Text mining support: Are we there yet?' and 'Supporting text mining requests at your institution: what does it entail?'
Combined abstract TBA

Speakers
PC

Patricia Cleary

Global eProduct Development Manager, Springer
Beginning in 2010, Patricia Cleary has been instrumental in crafting Springer's mobile strategy. Patricia’s work in mobile technology has forged new pathways to empower science and medical professionals with the information they need, precisely when and where it is needed. As... Read More →
LE

Laureen Esser

E-Resources Coordinator for the Humanities, Harvard Library
JF

Jen Ferguson

Assistant Head, Research & Instruction, Science & Data Services, Northeastern University
avatar for Kristen Garlock

Kristen Garlock

Associate Director, Education & Outreach, ITHAKA
Kristen Garlock is the Associate Director of Education and Outreach for JSTOR, responsible for education, training, and social media engagement. She has an MILS (1994) from the University of Michigan, and has worked at JSTOR since 1995.
avatar for Monica Moore

Monica Moore

Electronic Resources Librarian, University of Notre Dame
Monica is an electronic resources librarian at the University of Notre Dame. She earned her master's degree in library and information science from Syracuse University.
avatar for Janet Morrow

Janet Morrow

Head, Resource & Discovery Services, Northeastern University Libraries
Janet Morrow is the Head, Resource & Discovery Services at Northeastern University's Snell Library in Boston. She earned her MLIS from Simmons College in 1984 and has been at Northeastern in various acquisitions, e-resources & technical services roles since 1994.
AR

Amanda Rust

Digital Humanities Librarian, Northeastern University


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Data, Data Everywhere, Too Much to Think! Surveys, Usage Reports, and Decision-Making
This Lively Lunch session will cover a multitude of related ebook usage topics that small liberal arts colleges are experiencing:

- The complexities related to survey questions about ebook usage: the difficulties writing clear questions and definitions, and bridging the differences in usage across formats (print circulation vs. ebook usage reports.)

- The challenges of acquiring and managing comparable and consistent usage data: interpreting what’s being asked for in surveys, deciding which reports should be generated, and which statistics should be provided in response to the survey questions?

- The complexities of gathering the “right” data to aid internal decision-making. Usage reports gathered for surveys provide an overview of usage. More granular data is needed to inform collection decisions, and raises challenges for vendors and libraries.

Join this Lively Lunch to share your insights and practices!

Speakers
avatar for Helen Aiello

Helen Aiello

Acquisitions and E-Resources Librarian, Wesleyan University
BA

Becky Albitz

Associate College Librarian for Collection Management, Bates College
Becky Albitz is the Associate Librarian for Collection Management at Bates College. Previously she was the Electronic Resources and Copyright Librarian at Penn State, Head Librarian at Penn State Shenango, Media and Performing Arts Librarian at NYU and the Media Librarian at the University... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

12:45pm EST

Digital Archiving of Journals and Library Collection Development: The Long View
Libraries have managed the preservation of print journal collections effectively for many decades. Yet, as academic library collections shift to digital format and the conception of the library as a warehouse for print materials is increasingly challenged, the question of how we will preserve our collections shifts from the use of physical space to the use of virtual space. Central Michigan University’s journal collections are now 90% digital; we are adding little new material to our packed third floor print journal stacks. The question we now ask is: how do we assure long-term access to our digital periodical collections, including purchased packages of backfiles, when this content is hosted by a publisher that may go out of business?

Currently, CMU pays around $15,000 a year for Portico coverage. Yet, Portico only covers a portion of our holdings. Some of our digital materials are covered by LOCKSS/CLOCKSS, but we have, as yet, no relationship with either and are unsure that the self-hosting consortial model of preservation is workable in the long-term.

Speakers
KD

Ken DiFiore

Outreach Director, ITHAKA
Since 2005, Ken has been a Library Outreach Director at ITHAKA – the organizational home of JSTOR, Portico, Artstor, and Ithaka S&R. During his tenure, he has contributed to the business development, marketing, and adoption of innovative products and services. Ken holds an advance... Read More →
PG

Pamela Grudzien

Director of Acquisitions, Metadata and Resource Sharing Services, Central Michigan University Libraries
Pamela has many years of library experience in public services, collection development, resource sharing, and more recently, technical services.  This varied experience has provided her with a well-rounded perspective of academic library services, challenges, and opportunities. Her... Read More →
avatar for Matthew Ismail

Matthew Ismail

Director of Collection Development, Central Michigan University Libraries
KS

Kim Smilay

Director, Publisher Relations, CLOCKSS Archive


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Citadel Green Room, Embassy Suites

12:45pm EST

Don’t Share This Item! Developing Digital Collections and Services in a Consumer-Licensed World
What can my library do with a digital copy of a film? How can we provide downloaded video games to our users via Steam? Can we really circulate Roku devices?
Libraries have always faced unique challenges in providing non-academic content for academic use, but the digital age has brought particular problems of “one size fits all” consumer purchase models and vexing methods of DRM, wrapped up with a large bow of legal uncertainty for many institutions. Librarians Will Cross and Darby Orcutt bring their keen insights, deep collaborative expertise, and folksy wisdom to leading a discussion of how libraries can and should consider and apply the law, fair use, user expectations, and common sense in developing collections and services around digital content that is geared directly to end users.
Join the conversation to hear how your colleagues are sharing consumer-licensed popular materials and confronting legal and technical barriers. Share your stories about obstacles and successes bringing new technology and in-demand content to your patrons. And leave with a fresh perspective and new insight into the best strategies for this critical area of collections.

Speakers
avatar for Will Cross

Will Cross

Director, Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy, North Carolina State University
Will Cross is the Director of the Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy at N.C. State University where he guides policy, speaks, and writes on copyright literacy and open knowledge. He recently served as a Hewlett-funded Open Education Fellow and as an instructor for... Read More →
avatar for Darby Orcutt

Darby Orcutt

Assistant Head, Collections & Research Strategy, NC State University Libraries
I am a librarian, teacher, researcher, and leader deeply interested and involved in interdisciplinary and computational research, the future of higher ed, and cultural aspects of digital transformation.Assistant Head, Collections & Research Strategy, NC State University LibrariesFaculty... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

12:45pm EST

Engaging the Skill Set of the Millennials: Librarians, Content and Technology in the Mobile Age
The Millennial Generation student consumes and interacts with information in a multiplicity of ways, at any time, in any location. Where Generation X took computer skills from study to employment, Millennials have grown up with an array of devices - from games consoles to computers to smartphones to e-readers to tablets. They read, message, watch video, chat, blog, photograph and tweet, interrogating and assimilating data across diverse formats. The speed and flow of information alters expectations and provides opportunities to research, share and learn faster and more effectively. This paper reviews library science and educational literature on the Millennials in the last ten years. It outlines how Millennials have been characterized and how academic libraries have responded to their needs, with special reference to mobile services. It provides examples of the functionality and services that currently typify university library apps and mobile-optimized sites in the UK and USA. The generational lens, it concludes, provides a useful perspective on key developments in academic libraries in recent times.

Speakers
avatar for Jill Hawthorne

Jill Hawthorne

Associate Director, International Development, Wiley



Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

12:45pm EST

Facilitating Sharing Among Researchers
Research is improved when researchers are able to connect with other individuals to share results, concepts, theories, and disagreements. Researchers thrive in an open environment where theories and results are readily available. Researchers are motivated by further scientific discovery, access for their informational needs, and promotion of their own or others' work. Non-researchers also gain expertise and knowledge when they have access to current research. Traditional publishing, however, is a snapshot in time for research results and inherently does not encourage conversations and sharing. With technological and social tools, librarians and publishers can facilitate sharing among researchers and the public. How can publishers and librarians partner to improve collaboration and sharing? This discussion will bring together librarians and publishers for a frank dialogue discussing the values of librarianship in facilitating open access to information and publisher considerations.

Speakers
CU

Clemson University Libraries

Dean of Libraries, Clemson University
Library collaborations Leadership in libraries and public organizations Developing and managing library spaces
avatar for Alicia Wise

Alicia Wise

Director of Universal Access, Elsevier
Alicia is very passionate about expanding access to information, and particularly enjoys developing successful partnerships across complex stakeholder communities. Her areas of expertise lie at the intersection of copyright and digital technology. She joined Elsevier in June 2010... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Embassy Suites

12:45pm EST

From Heart to Engine: Visualizing Library Alignment with Institutional Mission
One of the most common phrases used to describe the academic library is "the heart of campus." It's a lovely sentiment that makes everyone feel good: the faculty and students on whose intellectual seriousness it reflects positively, and the librarians who are honored to be seen at the center of campus intellectual activity. When information was housed exclusively in physical documents that were located in the library, there was even an almost anatomical logic to the image: students and faculty flowed into and out of the library as a natural expression of their teaching and learning activities. However, as the information environment has undergone radical change over the past few decades, so to has the behavior of students and faculty. They still use the library and its resources, but in a shifting blend of old and new ways. Does the "circulatory system" model of the library's campus role still work?

In this Lively Lunch session, we will discuss a different construct: the idea of the library as engine rather than heart. In this model, the library is conceived as a centrally important component of the college or university that actively pushes the institution in the direction of its vision and goals, by consciously monitoring those goals and aligning its programs and practices explicitly in support of them. Critical discussion in the session will focus on a visual model of this alignment and its implications.

Speakers
avatar for Rick Anderson

Rick Anderson

Assoc. Dean for Collections & Schol Comm, University of Utah
avatar for Tim Bucknall

Tim Bucknall

Assistant Dean of Libraries, UNC Greensboro
Tim is founder and convener of the Carolina Consortium, and an inventor of Journal Finder, the first Open URL link resolver. He was recently named the 2014 ACRL Academic/Research Librarian of the Year.


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Magazines for Libraries and Magazines for Libraries Update: How Can We Help?
Since its inception in 1969 by Bill Katz, the goal of Magazines for Libraries (MFL) has been to help librarians with their selection of magazines and journals. The recently-added freely accessible online component of Magazines for Libraries, Magazines for Libraries Update (MFL Update; http://www.proquest.com/blog/mfl/), aims to cover new journals that may become part of the core titles in a Magazines for Libraries chapter, as well as niche and open access titles that may not be a core title for most libraries, but that may serve essential needs in some libraries. The objective for this session is to have a dialogue among the current MFL editor and attendees about journal collections, the role open access journals play in library collections, and how MFL and MFL Updates can provide the optimal information needed for librarians to build collections in 2015 and beyond.

Speakers
avatar for Cheryl LaGuardia

Cheryl LaGuardia

Research Librarian, Harvard University


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Laurens Room, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

New Methods for Extending Access: Implications for Publishers and Library Collections & Services
As libraries consider different ways to manage their collection budgets, alternate acquisitions models are being considered, including demand driven acquisitions (DDA), evidence-based management (EBM) options, and reliance on Inter-Library Loan (ILL) and document supply (meaning purchasing or acquiring on demand). There are long and short term implications for both publishers and libraries. These include developing new relationships with vendors/suppliers and assessing when any of these solutions are appropriate and what the consequences of such choices mean. Library users increasingly expect nearly immediate access and that usually implies either ILL from a consortia partner or a commercial vendor that can supply the needed item quickly and cost-effectively. Reviewing usage data provides an indicator of need that may translate into a future subscription or acquisition or determine what long term solution is best for ongoing needs. Libraries continue to explore and calculate how to cover these costs either as fee-driven incurred by user, restricted to specific user communities (just faculty, and graduate students), and whether they are covered as part of the overall collection management costs. The increasing role of Open Access generates additional complexity and both publishers/providers and libraries must determine how to distinguish between OA content and non-OA content. Collection development models of balancing ownership, subscriptions with and without perpetuity, OA plus new opportunities for extending access at a more macro level with different providers reflects major changes for all partners in this shifting paradigm. Likely to stimulate active discussion about implications for library collections and the changing models offered by publishers.

Speakers
avatar for Scott Ahlberg

Scott Ahlberg

Chief Operations Officer, Reprints Desk /Research Solutions
Scott has decades of experience in content, document delivery, and startup businesses, starting with Dynamic Information (EbscoDoc) in the 1980s, and later as an executive at Infotrieve. He has served in various roles at Reprints Desk since 2006, providing his expertise in operational... Read More →
avatar for Scott Bard

Scott Bard

VP, Product Development, 1science
avatar for Julia Gelfand

Julia Gelfand

Applied Sciences & Engineering Librarian, University of California, Irvine
Julia Gelfand has participated in many Charleston conferences for nearly 20 years.  She continues to have interests in many aspects of the library, publisher, vendor triad that shapes collection development decisions and is watching the tides shift with new and emerging technologies... Read More →
avatar for Jan  Peterson

Jan Peterson

Publisher Relations & Director, Reprints Desk
Jan is a publishing industry veteran with an emphasis on content licensing. She helped to establish document delivery as a legitimate revenue stream for publishers and with her Reprints Desk colleagues, works with librarians to provide workflow solutions to expanding access to needed... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Cooper Room, Courtyard Marriott

12:45pm EST

Open Access: Models by Necessity, Models by Design
The various business models underpinning gold OA publishing today are models by necessity. There is a system inefficiency and hold-up based on:
1. the majority of budget paying for scholarly publishing is tied up in large journal subscription deals
2. it is hard to transition a content business to OA, whether or not one supports the principle, and therefore content businesses are slow to make the switch.

There’s been much discussion about the efficacy of OA models. But those discussions are severely limited because there is not equal opportunity in the market to experiment with OA models. Since the early movers BMC and PLOS, more recent experimentation with models beyond simple APCs is limited to small organizations and startups willing to take the risk (e.g. PeerJ, UC Press, OLH) or large organizations willing to subsidize everything (e.g. eLife’s backers).

How can we appropriately judge which newer models are effective, with low scale and little room for experimentation? Do the current experimenters think they have it solved now, or do they know their plans/models will change in the future? If they will change, when? What will trigger this? And can we move beyond models driven by necessity?

This session will explore some of the most interesting new OA initiatives and efforts efforts to bring viable OA products and programs into the market. The panelists will be provocative, and lively, audience-aided, discussion will cover successes in, obstacles to, and industry hang-ups about, achieving optimal OA models that are truly by design.

Speakers
avatar for Raym Crow

Raym Crow

Senior Consultant, SPARC
avatar for Susan King

Susan King

Executive Director, Rockefeller University Press
I also serve as the chair of the board of Chor, Inc which provides the CHORUS service http://www.chorusaccess.org/
avatar for Dan Morgan

Dan Morgan

Publisher, University of California Press
The University of California Press has founded an OA journal, Collabra (Collabra.org) and an OA monograph publishing program, Luminos (LuminosOA.org). The Luminos program shares the cost burden of publishing in manageable amounts across the academic community. Collabra uses an innovative... Read More →
avatar for Lisa Norberg

Lisa Norberg

Principal, K|N Consultants
Open Access Network


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

12:45pm EST

Pushed by the Stream, but Steering with a Strong Paddle: Considerations for Streaming Media Acquisitions Policies
Streaming media, perhaps more any than other acquisitions medium, challenges librarians to negotiate stakeholders’ changing needs and balance these with rational workflows. This panel will explore the processes and considerations undertaken at two institutions to write streaming media collection development policies. The University of Kansas (KU) will share suggestions of data librarians need to collect and consider to write an informed policy. KU will discuss the results of a library user survey, conversations with campus stakeholders, analysis of title availability, and highlights from other libraries’ policies. Tulane University will share their written policy which addresses the library tradition of ownership in the midst of industry pressure to lease; the tension between traditional title-by-title collection development to meet local instructional and educational needs and budgetary and programmatic movements in favor of vendor curated collections; and, the costs and workflow concerns arising as institutions begin to host and take on digital rights management for owned files. This panel concludes with the perspective of an industry insider in current practices and emerging trends in the streaming media industry.

Speakers
avatar for Lea Currie

Lea Currie

Head of Content Development, University of Kansas Libraries
Lea Currie has been the head of Content Development at the University of Kansas Libraries since 2008 and employed with the Libraries in other positions since 1999. Lea’s principal role in her current position is to manage the collection development budget, review and analyze collections... Read More →
avatar for Lisa Hooper

Lisa Hooper

Head of Media Services, Tulane University
avatar for Tom Humphrey

Tom Humphrey

Director of Sales & Strategy, Kanopy
avatar for Joshua Lupkin

Joshua Lupkin

Chief Bibliographer for the Humanities, Tulane University
With a background in history academia and museums, Josh Lupkin brings a strong interest in interest in the way that technology does and does not influence humanities' scholars use of scholarly resources. He is especially interested in the evolution of ebook platforms how to balance... Read More →
avatar for Sara E. Morris

Sara E. Morris

Associate Content Development Librarian, University of Kansas
Sara E. Morris is the Associate Content Development Librarian at the University of Kansas Libraries, a position she has held since May of 2013. As such Sara works in partnership with the Head of Content Development to review and analyze the collection, makes selection and deselection... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

The Changing Academic Book Market Landscape: What’s Next?
The academic book business is in the midst of rapid and historic change, effecting publishers, book vendors, ebook aggregators, librarians, and users alike.

A panel of librarians, publishers and vendors will discuss the opportunities and challenges arising out of this change, discussing changing demands and exploring how we might best integrate print and digital into sustainable models and worklfows. Discussion will begin with the points below, assessing where we are today and where we will be in the future.

• What are user preferences for print and ebooks today, and how might these preferences change? Will books continue to be a significant part of the academic enterprise?
• Can libraries address their users' preferences for content type? If not, why not?
• How will libraries access or acquire the content or books their users need?
• What can vendors and aggregators do to help libraries meet their users' needs?
• Do vendors and publishers need to support a shift away from print paradigms or work to integrate print and digital? How do they need to adapt to the changing ways libraries are acquiring and users are using books.
• What business models will sustain the business of academic publishing?
• Do the ways we assign “success” need to change?

Speakers
CC

Christoph Chesher

Group Sales Director, Taylor & Francis
avatar for Carol Cramer

Carol Cramer

Head of Collection Management, Wake Forest University
Carol Joyner Cramer is the Head of Collection Management at the Z. Smith Reynolds Library at Wake Forest University. Before tackling Collection Management, she worked in Reference and as an Electronic Resources Librarian. She has also taught a credit-bearing Information Literacy course... Read More →
avatar for Rick Lugg

Rick Lugg

Executive Director, OCLC Sustainable Collection Services, OCLC
Decision support for print book collections
avatar for Monica Metz-Wiseman

Monica Metz-Wiseman

Director of Academic Resources, University of South Florida
Monica Metz-Wiseman is the Director of Academic Resources at the University of South Florida, a large public research university with over 50,000 students.  In her position, she has overall responsibilities for collections, technical services, interlibrary loan, and the University’s... Read More →
avatar for Kari Paulson

Kari Paulson

VP - Market Development, Books, ProQuest
avatar for Mark Sandler

Mark Sandler

Director, CIC Center for Library Initiatives, Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC)
Mark Sandler is the Director of the Center for Library Initiatives at the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC). He is interested in how libraries, publishers and users are managing the transition from print to electronic resources, with particular focus on the collaborative... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

12:45pm EST

The Changing Nature of OA Journals: Helping Scholars Identify the Good, the Bad, and the Political
When the Open Access (OA) movement began at the beginning of the 21st century, librarians and select scholars saw it as a way to level the playing field by disseminating scholarly work freely, by easing the financial burden placed on rising subscription costs, and by offering alternatives to the traditional publishing model. Predatory and opportunistic OA publishers were quick to arrive one the scene, however, leaving faculty and researchers scrambling for a new and updated vetting process for selecting their publication targets. Jeffrey Beall’s blog and Beall’s List, along with other important publication directories, have become an important part of the effort to provide oversight and information to scholars about OA publishers. In this session, presenters will discuss OA controversies, reviewing sources, and the transformation of academic publishing efforts in the context of OA issues. Recent trends in librarianship demonstrate the need to educate authors on how to comprehensively research journals before submitting manuscripts to them, how to avoid predatory OA publishers, and where scholarly communication is going in terms of oversight and reputability of OA journals. Presenters will also demonstrate the impact of Mr. Beall’s list on both the publishing world and librarianship.

Speakers
SA

Susan Ariew

University Librarian, University of South Florida
avatar for Matt Torrence

Matt Torrence

Associate Librarian, STEM Librarian, University of South Florida
I currently serve as the STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, & Mathematics) Librarian at the University of South Florida, Tampa Library. Along with the rest of the library professionals and subject specialists, I provide information expertise to students and faculty, with a special... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

12:45pm EST

Three Things I Wish You Knew: Surmountable Misunderstandings between Publishers and Librarians
Publishers and librarians haven’t always seen eye to eye, but when it comes to the ever-changing industry and adapting to new business models, they stand on common ground – neither is certain of what the future holds. Publishers are concerned with traversing this fresh terrain in a post-digital, rising Open Access era where the end user is king; while librarians remain suspicious of their intentions and stand their ground as a valuable player in the scholarly communication chain. But what if publishers and librarians came together to discuss what it is the other could do to improve upon the challenges they currently face? Could we enact change by openly addressing differences head-on?

In this session, a panel consisting of a publisher, librarian and industry consultant set out to do just that through a lively discussion of recent survey findings collected by Publishers Communication Group (PCG). This survey polled both publishers and librarians in PCG’s network built over 25 years with the intention of bridging the divide, improving lines of communication and coming to a mutual understanding of differing but equally valid perspectives. Attendees can expect to hear the top three things librarians wished publishers knew about their jobs, priorities and challenges; and vice versa. We will tackle such hot button items as budgets, price increases, open access, product bundling, usage metrics, institutional mandates, end-user marketing, and more.

Speakers
avatar for Janet Fisher

Janet Fisher

Senior Publishing Consultant, Publishers Communication Group
Janet Fisher has been in scholarly journals publishing for over 20 years, with stints at University of Texas Press and MIT Press. In 2003 she moved to Ingenta and then to Publishers Communication Group as Senior Publishing Consultant. Janet works with  academic and commercial publishers... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Rutledge Room, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Vendorbrarians: Librarians Who Work for Vendors and the Value They Provide to Library Customers
A panel of librarians working for different kinds of library vendors will discuss their unique and valuable roles inside their organizations. The session will be moderated by an Electronic Resources Librarian with an interest in library/vendor relationships. Librarians can add value to their company’s relationships with library customers as they share the same basic skill set as their colleagues in libraries and have a better understanding of their needs, industry standards, and the day to day realities of their customers. Participants will learn the kinds of roles librarians can have at vendors, how these positions compare and contrast with more traditional library work, their identities in the library profession, how library school did and did not prepare them for their jobs, and more. This will also serve as a call to action for vendors to hire more librarians to better serve their library customers. Attendees from libraries and vendors will be encouraged to share their thoughts and experiences with “vendorbarians.”

Speakers
avatar for Bob Boissy

Bob Boissy

Director, Institutional Marketing and Account Development, Springer Nature
avatar for Jalyn Kelley

Jalyn Kelley

Sr Uni Partnership Program Mgr, IEEE
Jalyn Kelley is the Senior Manager of the IEEE University Partnership Program (UPP). Prior to joining IEEE, Jalyn spent seven years as a Research Analyst at Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC) providing strategic market and technical research to IT specialists in the field. Jalyn... Read More →
avatar for Charlie Remy

Charlie Remy

Electronic Resources & Serials Librarian, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga
avatar for Marliese Thomas

Marliese Thomas

Solutions Architect, Ex Libris
Marliese Thomas, a native of Birmingham, joined Ex Libris in 2013 following nearly seven years with academic libraries. During her time in academia, she implemented two discovery solutions for a state ARL, directed outreach activities for a private liberal arts university, and generally... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Altmetrics in Practice: How Institutions Are Using Altmetric Data to Enhance Administrator, End-User, and Staff Assessment Practices
The big questions many research administrators, librarians, and faculty are asking around altmetrics are:
1. What are altmetrics?
2. How are they being used?
3. How can other organizations integrate this kind of data?

The reality is that many institutions are integrating altmetric data in new and innovative ways to enhance the experience of their researchers, support staff, administrators, and institutional marketing/outreach teams. Join Altmetric.com and customers (including the National Academy of Sciences and Stony Brook Medical Center) as they share why they are investing in altmetrics, how they are using them, and what other institutions -- academic and otherwise -- can gain from integrating this complementary data into their evaluation and assessment practices.

Questions in advance? Tweet to @altmetric

Speakers
avatar for Sara Rouhi

Sara Rouhi

Director of Engagement & Advocacy for Altmetric and Dimensions, Digital Science
Sara Rouhi is Director of Engagement & Advocacy for Dimensions with responsibility for education and outreach in the US and Canada for both Digital Science’s new Dimensions platform and Digital Science’s alternative metrics company, Altmetric. She... Read More →
avatar for Andrew White

Andrew White

Associate CIO for Health Sciences, Senior Director for Research Computing, Stony Brook University
Andrew has worked in academic/ research libraries for more than 25 years, holding positions as  Associate Director, Associate Dean, and Director. Prior to becoming the Associate CIO for Health Sciences, he was the Interim Dean of Libraries at Stony Brook University. Andrew is a member... Read More →
avatar for Colleen Willis

Colleen Willis

Senior Librarian, Impact Services & Business Development, National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine
Colleen Willis is a Senior Librarian, at the National Academy of Sciences, Engineering and Medicine. She is the project lead for the Library Impact Services, marketing and business development. She also teaches professional workshops for staff.


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

CC-BY: Is There Such a Thing as Too Open in Open Access?
Support and demand for researchers to publish in Open Access journals has been growing steadily among funding agencies, research organizations, and institutions of higher education. The Wellcome Trust and the Research Councils UK OA policies have begun imposing more finite restrictions, like publishing only under CC-BY licenses, on researchers. CC-BY, or Creative Commons Attribution, is one of several and the most open of all creative commons licensing. It most closely embodies the definition of OA, as established by the Berlin Declaration and Bethesda Statement on Open Access, by allowing for the most reuse, including the unrestricted creation of derivatives. Scholars have voiced concern that CC-BY may not be the best license for all disciplines. Libraries, as OA publishers, custodians of institutional repositories, facilitators of scholarly research, and organizers of information, are well positioned to enhance a discussion on balancing the needs of scholars for minimum control over their work with the goal of OA publishing to most widely disseminate information and scholarship to the public without barriers of country, class, access or financing.

Speakers
avatar for LeEtta Schmidt

LeEtta Schmidt

Copyright & Intellectual Property Librarian, University of South Florida
LeEtta M. Schmidt is the Resource Sharing and Copyright Librarian at the USF Tampa library and the Editor of the Journal of Interlibrary Loan, Document Delivery & Electronic Reserve. She is a member of ALA and FLA and has published articles in CR&L News, The Journal of Academic Librarianship... Read More →
avatar for Anthony Watkinson

Anthony Watkinson

Principal Consultant, CIBER Research


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

Combined Title TBA: Merging 'Butter Both Sides? : Recognizing the Potential Benefits of the RFP Process to the Library, Vendor, and Cooperative' and 'Every Dollar Matters! Using a Competitive Process to Select a Subscription Agent'
Combined abstract TBA

Speakers
avatar for Eileen Condon

Eileen Condon

Dean of University Libraries, Webster University
avatar for Carol Seiler

Carol Seiler

Account Services Manager, EBSCO Information Services
Carol Seiler started her career in libraries as a cataloger and has worked in almost all areas of the library. She has primarily worked as an academic/medical librarian but has also served at a public library and as a technical services trainer with a consortium. Carol has been with... Read More →
avatar for J. Michael Thompson

J. Michael Thompson

Head of Acquisitions, University of Houston
After graduating with an MLS from the University of Texas, J. Michael (Mike) Thompson began his professional career as the Copy Cataloging Manager at the University of Houston in 2000. In 2005, he moved from Cataloging to Acquistions at UH and was appointed to head the department... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Creating a Start-up Business in Scholarly Communications
While everyone talks about the start-up companies coming out of Silicon Valley, there are many start-ups of different kinds in scholarly communications. Some of these are for-profit, but some are not-for-profit. This panel, which consists of the heads of three start-ups, will survey the special issues start-ups face. Where did the idea for the company come from? Why do this as a start-up instead of creating it inside an established company? How did you finance the organization? What are the key things that the leaders of start-ups must do to be successful? The panel's presentations will be followed by a Q&A period.

Moderators
avatar for Joseph Esposito

Joseph Esposito

Senior Partner, Clarke & Esposito
I am a management consultant working in the area of publishing, especially scholarly publishing, and digital media. I work with for-profit and not-for-profit companies. Most of my clients are CEOs or Boards of Directors, whom I advise on strategy. My aim is to help organizations make... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Jonathan Breeze

Jonathan Breeze

CEO, Symplectic
avatar for Sam Molyneux

Sam Molyneux

CEO, Meta
avatar for Dan Whaley

Dan Whaley

CEO and Founder, Hypothesis
Dan is a coder and entrepreneur that created the first online travel reservation company on the web (ITN/GetThere) in 1995. He wrote much of the software, launched the business and guided the long term technical and product vision. GetThere went public in 1999 and was sold to Sabre... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

Evaluated, Removed, and Recycled – The Tale of Two Deaccession Projects Across the Disciplines.
How have two midsized public university libraries approached large-scale weeding projects in their monograph and bound periodical collections? Space is at a premium in academic libraries as new roles combine and compete with traditional ones. How can the collection be refreshed to promote more use? Where will more collaboration and creative spaces be housed? How does a midsized library refine the collection to bring better campus alignment? How should the project begin? Who should be involved in planning? How can campus faculty be included in the deaccessioning process? How is the campus perception of the project handled? What to keep, what to send to off-site, and what to discard? What do you do with all of those discarded books and journals? How to work with campus sustainability goals? Do ebooks play a part in what you keep and discard? How are different discipline areas handled when the book is valued differently? Are there useful guidelines like CREW (Continuous Review Evaluation and Weeding) that are applicable?

Speakers
avatar for John P. Abbott

John P. Abbott

Coordinator, Collection Management, Appalachian State University
John Abbott is Coordinator of Collection Management @ Appalachian State University, Boone, NC.  He previously served as North Carolina State University’s Associate Head of Collection Management with responsibilities for life sciences/agriculture, and as Texas A&M University’s... Read More →
avatar for Lauren Goode

Lauren Goode

Science Librarian, College of William and Mary
I'm very interested in developing research data services at my library. I am a liaison librarian for physical and natural sciences and I'm always looking for new ways to engage my community.
avatar for Martha Higgins

Martha Higgins

Research Librarian, College of William and Mary
Martha Higgins is a research librarian at the College of William and Mary. She earned her BA and MA in History at the University of Albany, and her MLS from the University of Maryland. She is the liaison to History, Anthropology, Africana Studies, and American Studies.
MJ

Mary Jordan

Collection Management Technician, Appalachian State University


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

2:25pm EST

Implementing Collection Lifecycle Management
In a time of ever increasing physical collection space shortages and rapidly evolving higher education institutions, a holistic understanding of the collection lifecycle as well as a strategic approach to collection development and retention as well as stakeholder engagement is needed. Some struggle with what materials to withdraw, especially if there is faculty opposition and how to move forward collaboratively. Leveraging the experience of leading the local culture shift in a large Association of Research Library, the principles, policies and methods required to shift mental models towards what must be retained, facilitating withdrawal decisions, and connecting collection development with ongoing collection management will be explored.
Audience members will leave with:
• An understanding of why collection lifecycle management may be beneficial
• key questions to ask themselves and colleagues when wanting to shift to collection lifecycle management
• an understanding of how existing policies and high-level workflows feed into the collection lifecycle management approach
• an understanding of the practical aspects of implementation,
• a link to a toolkit with policy templates, guides on collection evaluation and stakeholder engagement.
Largely relying on traditional presentation style, a series of poll-like questions will be used to learn about the audience and find resonance in audience members with the presentation content. Further, at the end of each section, a Q&A period will be built in.

Speakers
avatar for Annie Bélanger

Annie Bélanger

Associate University Librarian, Information Resources & Academic Excellence, University of Waterloo
Annie Bélanger is the Associate University Librarian, Information Resources & Academic Excellence, for the University of Waterloo. In this role, she provides executive leadership for collection lifecycle management as well as for information services, instruction, user engagement... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Cooper Room, Courtyard Marriott

2:25pm EST

Improving Access and Discoverability of E-Journals with NISO's PIE-J
PIE-J (Presentation and Identification of E-Journals) is a NISO Recommended Practice that offers guidelines for how best to present e-journals online to ensure that the content can be reliably discovered, cited, and accessed by users over time. When former titles are not visible or incorrect ISSNs are used, access is affected.  Come hear representatives from two publishers discuss how they have used PIE-J to help them meet some of the challenges of presenting precise journal metadata online and thus improve the discoverability of and access to their content. 

Speakers
avatar for Sarah (Sally) Glasser

Sarah (Sally) Glasser

Serials/E-Resources Librarian, Hofstra University
Sally Glasser is Serials/E-Resources Librarian at Hofstra University (Hempstead, NY) and Chair of NISO\\'s PIE-J Standing Committee.
avatar for Martha Sedgwick

Martha Sedgwick

Executive Director of Product Management, Sage Publications
As Executive Director of Product Innovation, Martha is responsible for the development of SAGE’s online products for the library and college market working within the UK, as well as working closely with colleagues in the US to explore new product innovations within digital reference... Read More →
SV

Stacy V. Sieck

Library Communications Manager, The Americas, Taylor & Francis Group
Stacy V. Sieck is the Library Communications Manager at Taylor & Francis Group and is responsible for managing the library marketing and communications activities for North and South America. She first joined Taylor & Francis in 2008 as the manager of the library and information... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Magnolia Room, Courtyard Marriott

2:25pm EST

Interrogating Demand: Pathways Toward Purchase in Patron-influenced E-book Models
Libraries have been utilizing a variety of methods to acquire e-books for many years. Single-title purchase, Demand Driven Acquisitions (DDA) with and without Short Term Loans (STLs), evidence-based programs and package purchase all continue to be employed. The University of California is currently using and piloting multiple acquisitions methods at both the individual campus and systemwide levels.
Join four University of California librarians as they discuss what has been learned from a single campus pilot of JSTOR DDA, a single campus DDA plan with STLs through EBL, a systemwide evidence-based pilot with CRC Press for ENGnetBASE titles and a systemwide DDA pilot with STLs through ebrary.

Speakers
avatar for Harold Colson

Harold Colson

eBooks Strategist, US History Librarian, International Relations Librarian, Social Sciences Collection Strategist, UC San Diego
Harold has been a selector and subject liaison at UCSD since 1988. He holds degrees from Wake Forest University and Indiana University. Cannot resist these conversation starters: Rolling Stones, craft beer, college football, genealogy, Route 66, Moomins.
JD

Jim Dooley

Head, Collection Services, University of California, Merced
Jim Dooley has been head of collections and technical services at the University of California, Merced since 2003.  Prior to coming to UC Merced he held a variety of positions in technical services and special collections at the University of Utah.  He serves on various University... Read More →
avatar for Deborah Kegel

Deborah Kegel

Librarian
Moomins
KS

Kerry Scott

Head, Research Support Services, University of California, Santa Cruz



Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Citadel Green Room, Embassy Suites

2:25pm EST

Knowing Your Strategic Advantage
Where do we go from here? This panel will explore the fundamental importance of knowing the core competencies of your institution, company, or association, and integrating them into your day-to-day operations. Three leaders from a library, a scholarly association, and a for-profit company will give their perspectives on how their past experiences are shaping their vision of the future. Elizabeth Lorbeer concentrates on the challenges and opportunities of opening a medical library in a new medical school in the digital era. What do you buy or lease? How do you provide access? How do you allow for future library, medical, and virtual developments, or provide for “free”?
Christine Charlip, the director of ASM press, will share how business decisions are made in an old and established association balancing 27 scientific divisions and 35 local branches. How will they disseminate their content? How should they implement open access? What new innovations will arrive? How will innovation in technology influence content development and dissemination?
Justin Clarke with Harrassowitz will discuss how an international book and journal vendor manages to balance historical legacy with the discovery and development of new technologies, products and services. How do they maintain meaningful connections in the evolving scholarly communications environment?
These three unique perspectives may lead us to navigate more successfully through the unceasing change that is all around us.

Speakers
avatar for Christine Charlip

Christine Charlip

Director, American Society of Microbiology (ASM) Press
Christine has worked for seven years to build ASM's publishing portfolio, adding ebooks collections, review journals, and new textbooks, including an innovative OA textbook and textbooks that incorporate ASM's Microbiology Education Curriculum Learning Outcomes. Her background in... Read More →
avatar for Justin Clarke

Justin Clarke

Director of Sales, HARRASSOWITZ
Established in 1872, HARRASSOWITZ has been serving libraries around the world for 150 years. Our customers value us for the quality and accuracy of our services and for our industry-leading and innovative solutions. We specialize in providing a comprehensive range of high-quality... Read More →
avatar for Liz Lorbeer

Liz Lorbeer

Library Director, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker M.D. School of Medicine
Liz is the library director at Western Michigan University School of Medicine, a newer medical school in the U.S. to be granted full accreditation from the Liaison Committee of Medical Education. I am interested in all things library and learning new ways to disseminate content using... Read More →
CM

Clark Morrell

President, Rittenhouse Book Dist., Inc.



Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

Learning Mendeley through Certification Program for Librarians
Mendeley launched a Certification Program for Librarians earlier this year and it has received enthusiastic support from over 800 participants world-wide. The Mendeley Certification Program for librarians offers a flexible, 100% on-line, self-paced learning structure in a 3-leveled program for librarians to learn about Mendeley functionally, technically, as well as the optimal user roll-out strategy at their institutions.
Librarians from both York University and College of Charleston will share their feedback and experiences as participants in the Certification Program. They will also discuss how the knowledge they have gained through participating in the Program enables them to consider how Mendeley fits within their library strategy and objectives to better serve researchers and students.

Speakers
YI

Yath Ithayakumar

Mendeley Market Development Manager, Elsevier
avatar for Rajiv Nariani

Rajiv Nariani

Science Librarian, York University
Rajiv is a Science Librarian at the Steacie Science & Engineering Library, York University. His subject areas include Biology, Kinesiology & Neuroscience. He is currently working on projects related to e-books, mobile devices, citation management programs & open access publishing... Read More →
JW

James Williams

Associate Dean, College of Charleston



Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Librarians, Publishers, Aggregators: Are You Missing the Boat on the Perfect Partnership?
The lines are certainly blurred on who is a content creator and consumer. Publishers create content and distribute out directly to libraries or through content aggregation partners. Libraries not only consume content but have become publishers in their own right. And aggregators distribute content in whole or in customized sets for and to both publishers and the libraries for the customers they all serve.

Topics include:
- How publishers,libraries and aggregators are jointly developing unique content sets that best target the needs of the academic and research community
- How non-traditional content, like blogs and tweets are being used by library customers that would otherwise be difficult to discover and collect
- The opportunities to license fragments of content including images and video and the value they bring to content creators and end-users
- The role of copyright-how all this activity can be done legally and easily

Speakers
avatar for Edward Colleran

Edward Colleran

Principle, Seacoast Partners
Edward Colleran has more than 20 years experience in the publishing business with a focus on global rights and licensing, collective rights management, marketing, market research and copyright. Edward founded Seacoast Partners in 2012. Seacoast Partners specializes in assisting STM... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Library/Press Collaboration: A Magical Mystery Tour
The growth of library publishing and of collaborations between libraries and university presses signals a desire both to challenge and complement long established scholarly publishing practices. What problems might these perceived solutions actually solve, and how might such partnerships actually benefit their host institutions, in the context of rapidly changing expectations of students, faculty, and administrators?

This will be a presentation in two parts. In the first part, Andrew Barker and Anthony Cond will showcase an innovative publishing partnership between Liverpool University Press and the University of Liverpool Library (together with a compendious knowledge of the Beatles back catalogue). They will describe exciting initiatives involving article scholarship and etextbooks in an open access environment, and the implications for publishing.  In the second part, Tony Horava will describe a fruitful partnership between the University of Ottawa Library and the University of Ottawa Press for publishing scholarly monographs as open access. This program has broadened dissemination, use, and visibility of the press’s books.  Together we will demonstrate that library/press collaboration is here to stay and is ‘getting better all the time’!

Speakers
avatar for Andrew Barker

Andrew Barker

Head of Academic Liaison, Special Collections & Archives, University of Liverpool
AC

Anthony Cond

Director, Liverpool University Press, Liverpool University Press
avatar for Tony Horava

Tony Horava

Associate University Librarian, Content and Access, University of Ottawa
The Big Deal has been a major challenge at our university, as we dealt with budget cuts, exchange rate issues, annual increases to the costs of scholarly resources, and the demand for new resources in many fields. The Big Deal is a complex iceberg floating in the middle of all this... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

2:25pm EST

Research Metrics: Best Practice in their Day-to-Day Use

Which is the best metric to use to uncover the merits of the journals in your collection? Should this same metric be used to understand the relative merits of the researchers at your university? Will it also work to find out which of these researchers’ articles is most impactful?

These and similar questions are hotly debated in the world of research. Quite rightly, they elicit strong, often emotional discussion, and rarely, if ever, is an answer arrived at. This is not surprising since the effort and debate stimulated by these questions cannot possibly lead to useful conclusions.  Why is this?

Research excellence is sought after everywhere in the world, but what is considered “excellent” varies. Is excellence about being well cited by peer reviewed articles, about winning funding, or about making a splash in the popular press and/or on Twitter? Is it about working with experts all over the world, registering patents, making raw research data sets available for others, or is it about educating the next generation of researchers? Research excellence is of course about all of these things and more, and trying to reduce it to a single metric is counter-productive and potentially damaging to the diversity of skills needed to solve today’s research questions.

The multi-faceted nature of research excellence can be better captured by a “basket of metrics”. Complementing expert judgment by being able to draw on a wide range of metrics from a basket allows more varied and nuanced insights into excellence than is possible by using any one metric alone. It also enables different metrics to be selected to help to answer the many different questions that are encountered in research.

We will advocate the common sense approach of using a “basket of metrics”. We will present case studies to illustrate the value of this approach, and to form the basis of discussion.


Speakers
avatar for Lisa Colledge

Lisa Colledge

Director of Research Metrics, Elsevier
avatar for Helen Josephine

Helen Josephine

Head of the Engineering Library, Stanford University
Helen Josephine is the Head Librarian at the Terman Engineering Library at Stanford University. She is the subject liaison and bibliographer for the School of Engineering departments of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Electrical Engineering, and Management Science and Engineering... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

2:25pm EST

Shotgun Session
1. I Need You to Need Me: Understanding User Needs
Katie O'Connell

This session focuses on methods for gathering and analyzing information about what users need from libraries and library vendors from quantitative statistics to qualitative feedback.  How can this information be gathered and how can it be used to prioritize future offerings?  Panelists will share their user needs analysis experiences from different perspectives-- a large university library, an image database/media management software provider, and a small special library.  The session will conclude with a dialogue between panelists and attendees about gathering and using user feedback.

2. “Interest” vs. “Impact”: Using Web of Science Usage Counts for discovery in the Social Sciences  
Don Sechler, Rachel Borchardt

In some disciplines in the Social Sciences, measuring and benchmarking citation activity can be useful for identifying the research impact of an article in its field.  But in many “slow to cite” or “low cite” disciplines in the Social Sciences it may be difficult to use citation activity as a strong signal of the impact of a paper. In the Web of Science, the item level usage counts measuring “reasonable, intentional user actions” can serve as signals of researcher interest in topics and particular publications. The presenter from Thomson Reuters will discuss how “item level usage” is measured and can be used on the Web of Science Platform. Rachel Borchardt from American University will discuss how usage count data from the Web of Science fits into the ‘altmetrics’ framework for measuring research impact.

3. “Everybody likes a roller coaster ride”:  Thrills, Chills and Spills – Visualizing 40 Years of Data on Budgets, Allocations, and Spending
David Sharp

This shotgun talk will use data visualization techniques to enliven almost four decades worth of historical numerical data on base and fiscal budgets, allocations, expenditures, inflation, currency fluctuations, and much more.  The data originates from Carleton University library (Ottawa, Canada) but will be supplemented, at times, by Canadian and U.S. contextual datasets.  Audience members will hopefully find some generalized confirmations in the data, as well as new perspectives by seeing numerical data tables translated into vibrant visual and spatial representations.   Librarians specifically might enjoy seeing how a representative academic library in Canada has historically evolved, perhaps testing some long held assumptions; vendors might find aspects of this session, such as the steady upward changes to ongoing budget commitments, insightful or helpful.    Strap yourself in, because in short, this will be a fast paced, up and down ride that packs forty years worth of stodgy materials budget history into 20 visually oriented slides and 6 minutes of talking.

4. “But That’s the Way We’ve Always Done It”: Shifting from a Liaison to a Centralized Model of Collection Development

Amanda Scull

This session will discuss the shift away from subject liaison models of collection development to a centralized model in a small academic library from the perspective of a newly centralized Collection Development Librarian. The session will address the limitations of the subject liaison model, the challenges faced during transition, and the functional realities of centralized collection development. I will discuss outreach, selection, and assessment as the three major areas where the change to centralization has required new policies and approaches to communication. Audience members whose libraries are considering a shift to centralized collection development will learn specific challenges to expect and strategies for addressing them.
 
5. Help, we started a journal! : Adventures in supporting open access publishing using Open Journal Systems
Anna Craft

The open access movement continues to grow, change, and offer exciting opportunities for researchers and content creators to share their work. One such opportunity is Open Journal Systems (OJS), a journal management and publishing system that is freely available via the Public Knowledge Project (PKP). But even a free software system is not without its costs, both to the hosting institution and to the creators and staff of individual journals. Institutions that wish to host or use OJS must be able to install, maintain, and support the product. And while faculty members and other academics are often experts in their content areas, not all of them are prepared to handle other needs associated with creating and publishing an online journal--including decisions that might involve article layout, copyright policies, graphic design, web design, and other technical issues. This presentation will focus on practical issues and lessons learned in supporting the creation of online journals using OJS at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro (UNCG). If you are using or considering OJS for scholarly publishing endeavors, this session will help you prepare for some of the possibly-unexpected questions and issues that may come up. 

Speakers
avatar for Rachel Borchardt

Rachel Borchardt

Associate Director, Research and Instructional Services, and Science Librarian, American University
Rachel Borchardt is the science librarian at American University. Her professional research focuses on the intersection of metrics and libraries, and she has written and presented on the topic in many venues, including a recent book publication titled Meaningful Metrics: A 21st-Century... Read More →
avatar for Anna Craft

Anna Craft

Coordinator of Metadata Services, University of North Carolina at Greensboro
Anna Craft is the Coordinator of Metadata Services at The University of North Carolina at Greensboro Libraries, where she works with metadata for the library catalog, digital projects, and NC DOCKS, UNCG’s institutional repository.  She began her library career at the North Carolina... Read More →
KO

Katie O'Connell

User Relations Manager, Artstor
avatar for Amanda Scull

Amanda Scull

Collection Development Librarian, Keene State College
I am the Collection Development Librarian and Assistant Professor at Mason Library at Keene; so in addition to my responsibilities related to the collection I also teach courses in the Information Studies minor and information literacy sessions. I am very interested in the intersection... Read More →
DS

Don Sechler

Product Development, Thomson Reuters
avatar for David Sharp

David Sharp

Head, Acquisitions, Carleton University Library



Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Teetering Between Two Systems for Managing Ebook Records
For more than a decade, libraries have had to manually add ebook records to their library catalog--a process that typically involved downloading MARC records from the vendor’s website, customizing them in some minor ways, and then uploading them into the catalog. With the advent of discovery services that let a library tick off from a list of electronic resources they subscribe to--databases, journal packages, etc.--so that that records for them can be found in the discovery service, it would seem that libraries might be able to get out of the time-consuming business of moving MARC records around. But how ready are discovery services to take on ebooks?

Drawing on our experience with Primo, we will discuss to what extent discovery services are ready for libraries to treat ebook packages in the same manner they treat journal packages. We will explore issues relating to the breadth and depth of ebook indexing; the frequency of indexing; the different ways some reference book platforms are treated by discovery systems; and the problem of ebooks that are purchased individually. Given that many libraries are still trying to bridge parallel systems for the discovery of ebooks--the catalog and the discovery service--this presentation should provide attendees with a deeper understanding of the challenges and a map for charting the way ahead.

Speakers
avatar for Stephen Francoeur

Stephen Francoeur

UX Librarian, Baruch College
I am user experience librarian at Baruch College (New York, NY).
avatar for Michael Waldman

Michael Waldman

Interim Chief Librarian, Baruch College
Baruch College, CUNY


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Laurens Room, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Tough Love: Guiding Student Researchers Toward a Better Future for E-Books
EPUB has emerged as the standard format for e-books due to its numerous advantages over PDF, including superior accessibility, enhanced navigation, lighter file sizes, and optimization for mobile devices. Both trade and academic publishers desire an EPUB output to meet the evolving usability needs of their customers and to streamline their workflows. However, there is little understanding of EPUB’s advantages among end-users and little appreciation for EPUB’s potential in academic libraries. Research has shown that most users don’t recognize the EPUB format, and prefer PDF due to its corporate branding and familiarity. This puts publishers and vendors in a difficult situation: continue to deliver PDF content at a rapidly increasing cost, both financial and in terms of usability, or risk turning users away by forcing them into an unfamiliar format?

This session will summarize how the various stakeholders view this evolving technology, and the extent to which they might take an active role in shaping it. It will present the reasons for EPUB’s ascendance among academic publishers, explain how PDF e-books present barriers to innovation and problems for accessibility, and give librarians ideas on how to integrate EPUB into research instruction.

Attendees can expect to learn about the EPUB and PDF formats from the perspective of publishers, vendors and users. Publishers should gain a deeper understanding of the challenges libraries face in terms of technological evolution. Librarians should come away with opinions about the extent to which they want to be involved in the transition to new, more accessible formats.

Speakers
avatar for Melissa Fulkerson

Melissa Fulkerson

Director, Vendor Relations, Elsevier
Melissa Fulkerson has responsibility for strategic partnerships and third party distribution of Elsevier's Reference Solutions portfolio. She envisions a future where researchers and professionals can make meaningful change in the world through seamless content and technology acc... Read More →
avatar for Emily OConnor

Emily OConnor

Adult Services Coordinator, Hennepin County Library
Emily is the Adult Services Coordinator of Hennepin County Library, with 20 years of experience in public and academic librarianship. She earned her MLIS from Florida State University and is completing her Master's in Leadership at Creighton University. Emily also serves as a consultant... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

Tradition and the Academic Library: A Critical Evaluation of Our Enduring Values Revisited (2015), by Michael Gorman

 A significant percentage of current library literature focuses on the technological advances stemming almost exclusively from the internet.  Michael Gorman, in his book Our Enduring Values Revisited, 2015, invites libraries and librarians to reflect on the library as a whole, for a realistic assessment of those “noble” traditions, enduring values and best practices that make libraries one of the pillars of the academic community.

This paper will discuss Gorman’s ranking of those values and traditions and critically evaluate their importance to the future of the academic library in a small liberal arts university.


Speakers
avatar for Joyce Dixon-Fyle

Joyce Dixon-Fyle

Professor; COORD/LIBRARIAN, COLLECTION DEVELOPMENT, DePAUW UNIVERSITY
Joyce is an academic librarian (Professor) and Coordinator of Collection Development at DPU, where she has worked for many years. She earned both Ph.D. (French Literature)and MLS degrees from Indiana University, Bloomington, IN. Her primary services include assessing and selecting... Read More →
AK

Azungwe Kwembe

Serial/Acquisitions Librarian, Chicago State University


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Rutledge Room, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

We’re Not So Different, You and I: How Librarians and Publishers Use Statistics in Different Ways to Achieve Similar Goals
Statistical gathering and analysis plays an important role for librarians and publisher alike as we strive to predict and decipher end user behavior and improve collection development. During this session, hear from a librarian who works with a large university library consortium, and a representative from a major publisher, on how statistics factor into our workflow—and the stories they can tell about how content is being discovered and used. Learn about specific projects and applications from each side, and hear how analyzing end user behaviors helps refine everything from services we provide to institutional decision making. There will also be time for audience members to ask questions and share their own experiences.

Speakers
AL

Alexis Linoski

System Libraries Resource Development Director, Texas A&M University
avatar for Sarah Schulman

Sarah Schulman

Account Development, Springer Nature
Account Development at Springer collaborates with librarians to help achieve the best possible value from their content. We use an ever-expanding list of methods and strategies, including: end user marketing assistance, statistical analysis and reporting, implementation assistance... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Embassy Suites

2:25pm EST

What Do Our Users Think About eBooks? 10 Years of Survey Data at the University of Denver
The University of Denver Libraries has conducted three large surveys about ebook usage and attitudes in 2005, 2010, and 2015. Each of these was sent to the entire university community and received thousands of responses. The 2005 survey was one of the earliest to examine user feelings about and awareness of ebooks and led to two articles, which are still regularly cited today. As such, it provides a useful baseline for understanding how attitudes have changed over time. This presentation examines the responses to the 2015 survey in depth and compares them to the two earlier surveys. This study explores general patterns of ebook usage, usage of ebooks relative to print books, and preferences for particular format for usage cases. Also examined are differences and similarities by discipline and by user type. Because the University of Denver has a very large ebook collection on a wide variety of vendor and publisher platforms, it is particularly well situated for a study of this sort.

Speakers
avatar for Michael Levine-Clark

Michael Levine-Clark

Dean of Libraries, University of Denver


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Will it ever settle down? The Impact of the Rapidly ebook business models on libraries and publishers
The landscape for purchasing ebooks continues to shift at a rapid pace. The sales of print monographs continues to fall precipitously and digital sales growth do not fill the gap. Monograph use in digital formats is growing exponentially. The use-based models of PDA/DDA and STL have become a significant part of the landscape, reshaping academic library workflows and the nature of collection development. As these new models have appeared and been widely adopted, business models have struggled to keep up, both for libraries and publishers. Most pricing has been based on traditional print sales/collecting models, which does not as it turns out reflect how the new models perform. More content is being delivered to libraries than ever before and at a substantially lower cost, which poses an imminent threat to the sustainability of monograph publishing.
Publisher changes in pricing, embargoes and withdrawal from new models entirely require libraries to continuously recalibrate collecting strategies, workflows and budgets. And as library budgets continue to decline, the sustainability of libraries as we currently know them is drawn into the maelstrom. Without understanding the impact of models on each part of the academic ecosystem, we are destined to continue in conflict.
Please join a discussion between a publisher, vendor and librarian of these critical issues.

Speakers
avatar for Rebecca Seger

Rebecca Seger

Vice President, Institutional Participation and Strategic Partnerships, ITHAKA
avatar for Michael Zeoli

Michael Zeoli

VP, eContent Development, YBP Library Services
YBP Library Services, 1997-current ebrary, 2005-2007 Regenstein Library, Acquisitions Dept., University of Chicago http://www.niso.org/news/events/2015/virtual_conferences/eternal_ebooks/


Thursday November 5, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

A Conversation with Publishers on NISO’s Open Discovery Initiative
Several publishers have publicly declared their conformance (see http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/credo-gale-ieee-and-sage-declare-conformance-with-nisos-open-discovery-initiative-300103269.html) with NISO’s Open Discovery Initiative recommended practice (RP-19-2-014). Coverage of licensed content by library discovery systems has not yet reached its full potential, so cross-sector discourse and transparency is needed to ensure librarians have all the information they need to make an informed decisions about the search technologies they provide to patrons. Bring your questions and concerns to this open panel discussion with four publishers about their ODI conformance statements and checklists.

Moderators
avatar for Laura Morse

Laura Morse

Director of Library Systems & Support, Harvard University
Laura Morse is Director, Library Systems & Support at Harvard University. In her current role, she manages a group of incredible systems librarians who provide support, training, implementation services, business analysis, and project management for a wide range of locally developed... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Karen McKeown

Karen McKeown

Director, Discovery & Analytics, Gale Cengage
I lead efforts at Gale, a division of Cengage Learning, centered on making the traditionally library focused resources Gale provides discoverable in the path of intended users - students, faculty and learners. Having a college aged daughter and being a part of a company whose legacy... Read More →
avatar for Julie Zhu

Julie Zhu

Senior Manager, Discovery Partners, IEEE
Julie Zhu cultivates and manages effective working relationships with Discovery Service, Link Resolver, Proxy Service and Search Engine providers to maximize IEEE content findability, visibility and accessibility in multiple discovery channels. She serves in NISO’s Information Discovery... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

All about eTextbooks and Libraries: New Models for the eLearning Environment
Today’s students are increasingly squeezed by higher education costs, and course material costs are no exception. More and more students seek rental options or skip the textbook altogether and those libraries that had enough resources and budget have historically tried to support students by placing textbooks on physical reserve. More professors are assigning Integrated Learning Materials that live online and include assessment tools and project support. Libraries have long been essential partners in ensuring access to vital online materials, but supporting these new learning models is not as simple as keeping a copy of the textbook behind the reserves desk. Come learn about new models and new technologies from eTextbook publishers and providers. Learn how libraries--even those new to the world of instruction and teaching--are exploring sustainable ways of getting involved in these new initiatives.

Speakers
avatar for Charles Lyons

Charles Lyons

Director, Butler Library, State University of New York College at Buffalo
Charles Lyons is Library Director at Buffalo State College. Previously he served as Associate University Librarian for Discovery & Delivery at the University at Buffalo, worked in the corporate library at Lehman Brothers, and in the Science and Engineering Libraries at the University... Read More →
avatar for Lisa Nachtigall

Lisa Nachtigall

Director of Sales Development, Digital Books, Wiley
avatar for Heather Staines

Heather Staines

Senior Consultant, Delta Think
Heather Staines is Senior Consultant at Delta Think and Director of Community Engagement for the OA Data Analytics Tool. Her prior roles include Head of Partnerships for Knowledge Futures Group, Director of Business Development at Hypothesis, as well as positions at Proquest, SIPX... Read More →
avatar for Intrepid by VitalSource

Intrepid by VitalSource

Intrepid by VitalSource
Intrepid by VitalSource learning technologies help global companies and organizations develop people to solve big business challenges. Unlike old technologies, with Intrepid you can provide learning that is scalable and deeply engaging, and deliver proprietary content securely on... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Altmetrics for Everyone: How Recommendations and Standards Support Further Growth
Alternative assessment metrics (or "altmetrics") are a relatively new phenomenon in scholarly communication and publication, but their creation and application is very wide-ranging. Typically seen as a complement to more established measurements such as impact factor, altmetrics utilize fresh data from online sources to view and inform scholarship and many decisions connected to scholarly output. As the field continues to establish itself, there is still a plethora of innovative tools that are yet to be created, especially when one considers opportunities such as connecting this data semantically.

Come hear how the cross-stakeholder groups working under the aegis of the National Information Standards Organization (NISO)’s Altmetrics Initiative are improving the scholarly communications field by creating definitions and use cases to help create common ground among users; determining new output types for the application of altmetrics; discussing how to better apply and utilize identifiers in this field; and recommending quality measures to be used for data contributed to altmetrics practitioners. Recommendations from these working groups, who are also working with other related industry efforts, will be an important contribution to the further growth and acceptance of altmetrics-based tools. There will be ample time for audience members to provide their own views and practices on how altmetrics are transforming how communications and decisions are made.

Speakers
avatar for Todd Carpenter

Todd Carpenter

Executive Director, NISO
Wine, food, wine, Standards, running, wine, food, wine.http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8320-0491
avatar for Nettie Lagace

Nettie Lagace

Associate Executive Director, NISO
Nettie Lagace is the Associate Executive Director at NISO, where she is responsible for facilitating the work of NISO's topic committees and development groups for standards and best practices, and working with the community to encourage broad adoption of this consensus work. Prior... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

Collecting in Squiggly (and Other) Languages: Challenges and Opportunities in International Acquisitions
In these increasingly globalized times, more and more scholars are doing research on other parts of the world, leading to a greater demand for international and area studies materials. However, the acquisition of these materials presents challenges and opportunities not present with mainstream western-language materials. This presentation will focus on the selection, acquisition, and processing of Middle Eastern and Southeast Asian materials, from the perspectives of two subject/area studies specialists – one a veteran, the other relatively new – and an acquisitions specialist. We will present issues in the selection-to-shelf life cycle, with examples from the UCLA Library collections based on our experiences and workflows. We will discuss the differences between foreign and regular acquisitions and talk about our various acquisition methods (i.e., cooperative programs, blanket and firm orders, gifts and exchanges, trips, personal contacts), highlighting both the challenges and the rewards. We will also touch on newer (to these areas) topics pertaining to digital materials (i.e., electronic resources, born-digital materials).

Attendees should come away with an understanding of the issues and processes related to the acquisitions of international materials. In addition, we hope to generate a discussion with the audience about alternative experiences and processes.

Speakers
avatar for Jade Alburo

Jade Alburo

Librarian for Southeast Asian and Pacific Islands Studies, University of California, Los Angeles
Jade Alburo is the Librarian for Southeast Asian and Pacific Islands Studies at UCLA. In 2017-2019, she was Interim Reference and Outreach Coordinator for the Charles E. Young Research Library. She was the coordinator of the 2016 National Diversity in Libraries Conference, President... Read More →
OC

Osman Celik

International Acquisitions Coordinator, Gifts & Exchange Section Head, The UCLA Library


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Rutledge Room, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Combined Title TBA: Merging 'Unevenness of Discovery: How deep can we go?' and 'Discovery: Beyond Initial Implementation & Participation…and into OPTIMIZATION'
Combined abstract TBA

Speakers
avatar for Scott Bernier

Scott Bernier

Vice President, Library & Government Relations, EBSCO
For more than 25 years, Scott has been focused on uncovering and understanding the needs and goals across the various members of the global library community. Through the years with EBSCO, his role has become more focused on gathering and sharing insights with libraries and other... Read More →
avatar for Christopher C. Brown

Christopher C. Brown

Reference Technology Integration Librarian, University of Denver
University of Denver, Main Library
avatar for Julie Zhu

Julie Zhu

Senior Manager, Discovery Partners, IEEE
Julie Zhu cultivates and manages effective working relationships with Discovery Service, Link Resolver, Proxy Service and Search Engine providers to maximize IEEE content findability, visibility and accessibility in multiple discovery channels. She serves in NISO’s Information Discovery... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Effect of Library Advocacy on Mendeley User Adoption and Productivity
Millions of researchers and students currently use Mendeley.com, a free reference manager and one of the largest academic collaboration networks, to support them in reading, writing, collaboration, and publishing processes. Mendeley is an easy to use reference management tool with only self-help on-line tools available for researchers. However, in the last two years, with its integration with Elsevier, more varied support resources have been available for new users.
Stanford library has adopted and promoted Mendeley for many years and have licensed Mendeley Institutional Edition for more widely university-wide usage for the past 3+ years. Stanford librarians, such as Helen Josephine, have been providing and advocating a wide variety of training and promotional support services to ensure that its researchers, students, and other users would know how to best showcase the various Mendeley features. Stanford library partnered with Mendeley to study the effect of library advocacy on user adoption and productivity. Through a two-phased study of 9+ months, we examined and validated the effect of library workshops and promotions on researcher support.

Speakers
MG

Matthew Green

Institutional Product Manager, Mendeley
YI

Yath Ithayakumar

Mendeley Market Development Manager, Elsevier
avatar for Helen Josephine

Helen Josephine

Head of the Engineering Library, Stanford University
Helen Josephine is the Head Librarian at the Terman Engineering Library at Stanford University. She is the subject liaison and bibliographer for the School of Engineering departments of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Electrical Engineering, and Management Science and Engineering... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Cooper Room, Courtyard Marriott

3:30pm EST

Life Post-ILS Migration: How Far Have We Come Since Our “Go Live” Dates and Where Do We Go From Here?
Next-generation library systems promise new opportunities to expand beyond our existing methodologies and in response there has been a surge of institutions migrating to web-based systems. A lot of research and planning goes into choosing and moving to a new ILS, but what happens after migration and implementation? And how closely does reality align with expectations? This session will share the experiences of 3 institutions who implemented ExLibris’ Alma as early adopters and explore the ways in which they conceptualize the role of the ILS. Speakers will engage the audience on the challenges in effective management of workflows in a constantly changing environment, the continuous assessment of Alma’s relationships with staff, other systems (e.g., digital assets management, discovery), and impact on our users, and the potential for greater collaboration in the future. Questions and comments are highly encouraged from the audience.

Speakers
avatar for Susan Flanagan

Susan Flanagan

Collection Development Librarian for Electronic Resources, Getty Research Institute
avatar for Moon Kim

Moon Kim

Acquisitions Librarian, Ohio State University
AK

Ann Kutulas

Cataloger, Tarrant County College



Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

Making Institutional Repositories Work: From the Frontlines to the Future
Editors of the 2015 Charleston Insights Publication, Making Institutional Repositories Work, will discuss some of the major issues surrounding repositories including: platforms, hosting, discoverability, open access, publishing, and assessment. In addition, members of the University of Central Florida Libraries STARS (Showcase of Text, Archives, Research & Schol-arship http://stars.library.ucf.edu) IR team will focus on winning IR marketing strategies.

Speakers
avatar for David Scherer (he/him)

David Scherer (he/him)

Scholarly Communications and Research Curation Consultant, Carnegie Mellon University
David Scherer is the Scholarly Communications and Research Curation Consultant with the University Libraries at Carnegie Mellon University. David develops and oversees the sustainable programmatic scholarly communication and research curation solutions, services, and workflows through supporting... Read More →
avatar for Burton Callicott

Burton Callicott

Reference Librarian, College of Charleston
I am the Instruction Coordinator for the College of Charleston Addlestone Library and I am interested in Institutional Repositories. I am helping to get the CofC IR, The Charleston ARC, off the ground and running and, with Andrew Wesolek and David Scherer, I just had an edited volume... Read More →
avatar for Barbara Tierney

Barbara Tierney

Head of Research & Information Services, University of Central Florida Libraries
Barbara is Head of Research and Information Services for the University of Central Florida Libraries (2013 to the present). She formerly served as the Head of Research and Information Services for the University of North Carolina, Charlotte (2011-2012). Barbara was an Invited... Read More →
avatar for Andrew Wesolek

Andrew Wesolek

Head of Digital Scholarship, Clemson University
Andrew Wesolek serves as Head of Digital Scholarship at Clemson University. In this role, he captures the intellectual output of Clemson University and works to make it openly available to any researcher with an internet connection. He also works closely with Clemson University Press... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Embassy Suites

3:30pm EST

Money, Money, Money....Or Not!
Each library’s budget is unique, however providing information about the budget is important across all libraries and is a critical factor in how the library is perceived by its constituents. The cost of e-resources; what is and isn’t freely available electronically; and optimizing a flat budget in an era of escalating costs - all are issues often misinterpreted by the campus community, leading to misunderstandings and misinformation. Limited budgets, escalating prices, and new acquisitions strategies necessitate clear communication with librarians and faculty about the financial realities and complex decisions surrounding collection development.

Attendees will learn how one academic library initiated a program to educate librarians and faculty about budget realities in order to provide financial transparency.

Library administrators at a large public university met with librarians in a workshop format to discuss funding sources; allocations; expenditures; deficits; high cost resources; collection decision factors; and strategies for acquiring content. Librarians brainstormed solutions to real-life problematic collection development scenarios. Both an information-sharing forum and professional development event, the workshop served to update, educate, and generate discussions for both veteran and new librarians. Librarians then presented an abbreviated version of the workshop to faculty library representatives, giving faculty a realistic view of the acquisitions budget and complexities of collections decision-making.

This conference program will include time for attendees to brainstorm solutions to real-life collections budget scenarios.

Speakers
avatar for Mary  Gilbert

Mary Gilbert

AUL for Content Management, Towson University
Mary Gilbert, a Librarian IV with permanent status at Towson University, is Assistant University Librarian for Content Management, Albert S. Cook Library, and part of the library’s senior management team. Responsibilities include management of the library’s over two million dollar... Read More →
avatar for Deborah Nolan

Deborah Nolan

Dean of University Libraries, Towson University
Deborah Nolan has served as Dean of University Libraries at Towson University in Towson, Maryland since 2006. Her career spans school, community college, private university and public university libraries in Ohio, North Carolina and Maryland. She earned her bachelor's degree from... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

OhioLINK eBook Aggregator Study
In a world of instant online access and limited space and funding, academic libraries find themselves challenged to provide information resources with the format and speed expected by users. In this environment, obtaining and maintaining an appropriate mix of print and electronic books is key. As a consortium of 121 academic libraries in the state of Ohio, OhioLINK is uniquely placed to collect and analyze data on a large scale on behalf of the libraries it serves. To this end, OhioLINK asked five major ebook aggregators to present and discuss innovative acquisitions models that could help pave the way forward. As a part of this comparison, OhioLINK staff examined the availability of ebooks from the most-purchased university presses from within its membership at both the publisher and title levels. Results confirm that given the current availability and usability of ebooks from these major publishers, a combined and cooperative book/ebook strategy is required. This presentation will focus on the methodology of this analysis, which took advantage of commonly-used tools such as Excel and the open source software OpenRefine to complete the comparison.

Speakers
avatar for Amy Pawlowski

Amy Pawlowski

Deputy Director, OhioLINK, OhioLINK
avatar for Joanna Voss

Joanna Voss

Associate Director of Licensing & Analytics, OhioLINK



Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

3:30pm EST

On the Premises and Beyond! Managing Copyright Policy in the Library through Institutional and Technological Change.
We will discuss issues important to every library large and small - including the cheapest insurance you can buy, providing offsite access to library copies, and negotiating licenses with publishers to ensure that library resources are available where patrons interactions actually occur.

Libraries, librarians, and library staff are protected by a host of exceptions and copyright rules that are often not followed correctly (or at all!$. We will discuss easy, simple compliance with the laws protecting libraries from infringements made on the traditional library premises.

Further - the library’s work is increasingly off-site - virtual consultations, delivering materials off site - we’ll discuss different library models of delivering services and how copyright law can affect the depth and breadth of online services. What are “virtual library premises” and are they legal? What is distribution to the public - and how does offering limited access to digitized in-copyright collections affect library liability? Are library premises restricted to actual physical spaces or can we extend the concept of the reading room beyond the four walls of the traditional library? The answers affect every library - and their relationships with publishers - as we continue to manage the vast changes in services and material delivery that technological change has enabled.

Speakers
avatar for Brandy Karl

Brandy Karl

Copyright Officer, Pennsylvania State University
Brandy is a copyright attorney and advises the Libraries on copyright matters, helps craft University policy and strategy to provide the fullest access to collections, & supports the University's mission with outreach, education, and consultations.


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

3:30pm EST

Optimizing E-Resources Management
Librarians who manage electronic resources will readily testify to the challenges; from managing holdings to setting up linking, there is much to account for. What are the best practices to consider when managing electronic resources? What tools exist and how do they work together? Where, how can, and should, vendors assist by enabling better workflows and interoperability?
Panelists will draw from their experiences and discuss how e-resources management can be optimized. Topics of discussion will include the evaluation and assessment process, ordering, and customizing workflows to meet institutional needs. Beyond workflow pain-points, panelists will also look at the impact e-resource management has on users, including how e-resources usage information can inform services such as collection development, interface design, and instructional practices.

Speakers
avatar for Athena Hoeppner

Athena Hoeppner

Discovery Services Librarian, University of Central Florida
Athena Hoeppner is the Discovery Services Librarian at the University of Central Florida, in Orlando, Florida. Her career in academic libraries spans 25 years with roles in public services, systems, and technical services. In her current role, she jointly oversees the eResources lifecycle... Read More →
avatar for Oliver Pesch

Oliver Pesch

Chief Strategist, EBSCO
Oliver Pesch works as chief product strategist for EBSCO Information Services where he helps set direction for EBSCO's e-resource services and products, including EBSCO Usage Consolidation and EBSCONET Analytics. Oliver is a strong supporter of standards and is very involved in the... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

Publishing Our Own Work: Contributing to the Professional Literature through Systematizing Sharing of Library Reports
Library employees do research and investigation as part of their responsibilities in carrying out the operations of a library; however, much of this work is not published in the professional literature and is only inconsistently recorded in committee documents. As such, this work is hidden both from others in the Library who might use it and from the profession at large, meaning that other libraries were not able to benefit from it. To address this problem, the University of Illinois Library (Urbana-Champaign) established the Library Occasional Report Series (LibORS) in 2015.

The process of establishing LibORS included exploring what it would mean to commit to publishing and promoting the University Library’s work as an organizational practice as well as creating workflows, acquisition criteria, editorial guidelines, a report template, and a blog as well as other communication mechanisms. The LibORS team also had to make important decisions about preservation and impact evaluation, including the use of alt-metrics, for this digital only series.

This session will explore the value of this type of series while discussing the specific case of LibORS, including the challenges faced in establishing a completely new publication series. This session will be of interest to participants hoping to curate and publicize their organization’s work as well as librarians generally interested in the process behind establishing a publication series. We will invite discussion of others’ experiences establishing journals or series publications.

Speakers
avatar for Sarah Crissinger

Sarah Crissinger

Information Literacy Librarian, Davidson College
avatar for Emily Hardesty

Emily Hardesty

Graduate Assistant, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
I am a graduate assistant for Research and Information Services at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. I am a second year student at GSLIS, and my interests include international relations, community outreach, and French literature. In my spare time, I love to run half... Read More →
avatar for Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe

Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe

Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe is now Professor/Coordinator for Research and Teaching Professional Development in the University Library at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She previously served as the University Library's Coordinator for Information Literacy Services and... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

3:30pm EST

Shotgun Session
1. Peeling Back the Discovery Layer: Web-Scale Searching, User Expectations, and Information Literacy 
Nora Almeida, Alexandra Hamlett, Helen Georgas

This session will examine how a newly adopted web-scale discovery tool at the City University of New York (CUNY) has impacted user experience and information literacy initiatives. Through a discussion of user experience based on qualitative interactions with students in various research contexts, search statistics, and chat reference inquiries, we will explore implications of web-scale search environments on reference service and instruction at three CUNY campus libraries.  We will touch upon institutional differences and how technological and disciplinary contexts impact customization decisions and instructional priorities.  Attendees will be prompted to consider how research environments and technology impact user expectations in ways that may contribute to critical reflection of their own approaches to information literacy instruction. We anticipate that session attendees will discover how libraries can analyze web-scale discovery environments and student search behaviors to enhance information literacy initiatives at their own institutions, while improving individual user experience. Additionally, we will provide practical instructional strategies for use in reference consultations, one-shot instruction sessions, and credit courses that attendees can adapt for use at their own campuses.

2. Collection Development and External Data: An Opportunity
David Brennan

Many library systems and analysis tools focus on reporting library holdings and use metrics. There are fewer tools that allow for comparing holdings to external data such as bibliographies and vendor packages for the purposes of collection assessment and development. This session describes the experience of the George T. Harrell Health Sciences Library, Penn State Hershey, in developing a tool to compare this external data to holdings using the SIRSI WebServices API. It is intended to encourage the audience to investigate what APIs are available to them for developing tools for their own environments.

3. VHS, DVD, Streaming Video: One Library’s Dilemma
Ibironke Lawal, Emily Davis Winthrop

Video Home System (VHS) videocassettes appeared in our homes in the 1970’s, changing the discourse of the television and movie industry. It was a welcome phenomenon for libraries. Before VHS, there was the U-Matic format, which did not last very long because of the cost and limited storage. After surviving the competition with Betamax, VHS became the standard format between the 1970’s and 1995 when DVD’s were invented. DVD’s (Digital Versatile Disc) as the name implies can be played on multiple types of players and they offer higher storage capacity. Gradually, DVD’s became the default for libraries and VHS cassettes slowly became obsolete. Libraries are now transitioning to the streaming media. Streaming media is multimedia that is constantly received by and presented to an end-user in real time as it is delivered by the provider. With these three formats in the collection libraries face the dilemma of what to do with the old (DVD), the older (VHS), and the oldest U-Matic. At Virginia Commonwealth University, we have over three thousand VHS tapes. This summer, we decided to review our VHS collection. We have more questions than answers. This presentation, apart from giving the workflow of our activity, creates an opportunity for librarians and vendors to continue the conversation of addressing this dilemma. 

4. Less is More...Likely: Lessons from Departmental Libraries in the Decreasing World of Library Space
Corey Seeman
 
The shrinking library is not news.  Academic libraries have been responding to space constraints for many years, especially in the context of increasing student spaces or alleviating space constraints elsewhere at the university of college.  Shrinking footprints have not only reduced library's capacity to manage a print collection, it has potentially changed it role on campus.  While the print age heralded the library as a repository of knowledge, we have seen it transform into academic student centers.   And while many libraries may chart their own course in bringing on new services and creating new student spaces, many departmental libraries have been forced to space reductions based on other needs at their respective schools. The more ambitious the school, the more programs formed and space needed to house them.  While many will assume this is the plight of the departmental library, responding to space contractions will impact all academic libraries in time.  Exploring the contractions made at these business, medical and science libraries, we can see a glimpse of what the future might hold for many academic libraries.  This presentation will explore space contractions in departmental libraries and how they responded on both the collection and service aspects of library work.  In addition, we will explore how this trend might expand to colleges and universities' main libraries.

5. The User-Driven Collection 4.0: To Infinity and Beyond
Darby Orcutt 

For more than a decade, the NCSU Libraries has had some level of user-driven collecting, beginning with very small-scale programs and leading up to full-scale e-preferred Demand Driven Acquisitions (DDA) plans. Over the last two years, however, we have rapidly increased our reliance on user-driven selection far beyond vendor-side DDA programs, developing an in-house Books By Request (BBR) program, and working with our primary book vendor to engineer approval plans in novel and unique ways (for which their current systems were not designed) to support the automated curation of DDA and BBR pools. The results thus far include: better aligning monographic expenditures with documented user needs, greatly increasing the acquisition of books in electronic versus print format, and eliminating most title-by-title selection decisions, thus freeing subject specialist time for new and more strategic work.Participants in this session can expect a rapid-fire introduction to new methods of crafting user-driven selection pools, see quantifiable results from implementing these, and learn the challenges of implementing such a plan within a publishing and vendor landscape that is not yet designed to support it. 

Speakers
avatar for Nora Almeida

Nora Almeida

Instruction and Outreach Librarian, New York City College of Technology (CUNY)
Nora Almeida is an urban swimmer, writer, performance artist, librarian, and environmental activist. She’s an Associate Professor at the New York City College of Technology and a long-time volunteer at Interference Archive. She has organized media-making workshops, public events... Read More →
avatar for Helen Georgas

Helen Georgas

Reference and Instruction Librarian, Brooklyn College, CUNY
avatar for Alexandra Hamlett

Alexandra Hamlett

Assistant Professor, Information Literacy Services & Instruction, Stella and Charles Guttman Community College
avatar for Ibironke Lawal

Ibironke Lawal

Science and Engineering Collections Librarian, Virginia Commonwealth University
I have been at VCU for over a decade as collections librarian and liaison to the School of Engineering and science departments in the College of Humanities and Sciences. Developing and maintaining relevant collections, providing effective service to students, moving them toward academic... Read More →
avatar for Darby Orcutt

Darby Orcutt

Assistant Head, Collections & Research Strategy, NC State University Libraries
I am a librarian, teacher, researcher, and leader deeply interested and involved in interdisciplinary and computational research, the future of higher ed, and cultural aspects of digital transformation.Assistant Head, Collections & Research Strategy, NC State University LibrariesFaculty... Read More →
avatar for Corey Seeman

Corey Seeman

Director, Kresge Library Services, University of Michigan
Corey Seeman is the Director of Kresge Library Services of the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. The unit has recently undergone a great transformation from a traditional library to an electronic-only library service group with the completion of the Ross Construction... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Size, Perception, and Power in Library/Vendor Relations
Our perceptions of ourselves and our roles deeply impact how we execute our job duties. This panel will explore the perceptions about vendor relations and librarian roles with special attention to the size of institution. Librarians from academic libraries ranging in size from very small to very large will discuss their perceptions and address questions such as: Do large libraries and major accounts get what they need while small schools get what is offered? Do institutions who “pull weight” with vendors have an obligation to other libraries? How much agency, autonomy, and weight does one library or librarian have? Throughout, we will examine our perceptions of our roles and the relationship to draw out the real impact that those perceptions have on our work. The audience will engage with the panel throughout the session.

Speakers
avatar for Rachel Fleming

Rachel Fleming

Lead Librarian for Acquisitions/Budget Officer, Appalachian State University
Rachel Fleming is Lead Librarian for Acquisitions at Appalachian State University, where she manages the acquisition of all material types. She has previously served as Serials Librarian at Western Carolina University and Collection Development librarian at Central College in Pella... Read More →
avatar for Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe

Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe

Professor, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Lisa Janicke Hinchliffe is now Professor/Coordinator for Research and Teaching Professional Development in the University Library at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign. She previously served as the University Library's Coordinator for Information Literacy Services and... Read More →
avatar for Heather Wilson

Heather Wilson

Acquisitions & Electronic Resources Librarian, Caltech Library


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

The Role of Discovery and its Relationship with the ILS
There's been much ado about the role of the Integrated Library System (ILS). Traditionally, the ILS of course has played an important role in both the management and accessibility of library resources. This role was based predominantly on the need to catalog, acquire and circulate print items. Yet in the course of time, the focus has shifted increasingly towards digital items. And with this trend, the end-user expectations have shifted as well. Today, end-users expect (demand) an experience on the library’s website to be as agreeable as (and probably better than) elsewhere. As end-users we expect to find relevant information easily. Plain and simple.
This panel will look at the key role of the discovery service and its relationship with the ILS in supporting the library’s mission. The front-end discovery service is, after all, the gateway to the library’s resources where the user experience (read: retention) is effective or not. Panelist will ask the question: how central is the discovery service to the library’s mission? How should the ILS support discovery? And how can libraries best assess and choose the discovery service independent from the ILS back-end?

Speakers
avatar for Neil Block

Neil Block

VP, Global Open Source Innovation, EBSCO
avatar for Elizabeth Leonard

Elizabeth Leonard

Asst. Dean, Seton Hall University
avatar for Tim McGeary

Tim McGeary

Associate University Librarian for Digital Strategies and Technology, Duke University


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Think Bricks and Mortar Don't Matter? Usage of Library Resources During Our Year of Renovation
We began to plan for the closure of our library for a year-long renovation by adding significantly to our e-book holdings, and switching many print journals to e-only. All public services were moved to another building; classrooms and remote study areas were set up in other buildings; and overnight material pulls from the library were set up. We will show how acquisitions, reference, circulation, and database usage were affected by the renovation. What we expected and what we discovered were two very different things.

Speakers
KG

Kathy Gehring

Serials & E Resorces Librarian, Connecticut College
MH

Melodie Hamilton

E-Resources Librarian, Connecticut College
LM

Lorraine McKinney

Acquisitions Supervisor, Connecticut College


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

Try Try Again: Better Faculty Outreach through Trial and Error
Reaching out to faculty about library resources and services is an ongoing and sometimes mysterious process for librarians and vendors alike—one that, when effective, can contribute to higher ROI and improved collaboration between libraries and publishers. However, it can be challenging to reach that sweet spot between “effective” and “annoying”, especially in the face of seemingly non-responsive faculty. During this session, hear specific examples of outreach trial and error from three unique perspectives: a subject librarian, a head of resource acquisition and discovery, and a publisher representative. Learn how all sides qualify and measure success, how to venture outside your comfort zone, and best practices for marketing library resources to faculty. There will also be time for audience members to ask questions and share their own experiences.

Speakers
avatar for Patti McCall

Patti McCall

Physical & Life Sciences Librarian, University of Central Florida
Open access, outreach, collection development and all things science librarianship. Also, cats, dogs, Law & Order, and The Big Lebowski.
avatar for Sarah Schulman

Sarah Schulman

Account Development, Springer Nature
Account Development at Springer collaborates with librarians to help achieve the best possible value from their content. We use an ever-expanding list of methods and strategies, including: end user marketing assistance, statistical analysis and reporting, implementation assistance... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Citadel Green Room, Embassy Suites

4:15pm EST

Refreshment Break
Thursday November 5, 2015 4:15pm - 4:45pm EST
TBA

4:45pm EST

Innovation in Open Access Monographs, Archives and Journals
If one were to review the past 10 years of conference proceedings and published papers discussing open access in the production of scholarly content, she would find relatively little on business model and publishing model innovation. Most of the scholarly conversation has been around article processing charges for journals, embargo periods, and the role of governmental and institutional funding and purchasing. But business and publishing model innovation is alive and well in open access and will be an increasingly potent force for advancing the cause of open access beyond journals and into all forms of scholarly content from primary data to monographs to archives and beyond.
In this panel we bring together three voices from the publishing industry to share stories of innovation in journal, monograph and archive open access publishing. Alison Mudditt Director, University of California Press, David Parker Publisher, Alexander Street and Brian Hole, Founder and CEO of Ubiquity Press, will discuss the state of open access they found when they surveyed the respective publishing space they operate in (monographs, archives and journals), how they responded with the current new open access model they have offered to the university library space and close with musings on what the future may bring as open access keeps evolving.
Rick Anderson, Associate Dean for Scholarly Resources & Collections of the University of Utah will synthesize the various open access publishing perspectives presented by the panelists in a summary discussion and moderated question and answer session.

Moderators
avatar for David Parker

David Parker

VP, Editorial & Licensing, Alexander Street a ProQuest Company
David Parker is VP Editorial and Licensing for Alexander Street – the leading provider of video, multi-media databases and unique, curated content to the global university library market. Prior to his role with Alexander Street, David founded Business Expert Press and served as... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Rick Anderson

Rick Anderson

Assoc. Dean for Collections & Schol Comm, University of Utah
avatar for Brian Hole

Brian Hole

CEO, Ubiquity Press


Thursday November 5, 2015 4:45pm - 5:30pm EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

4:45pm EST

Shared Print in the Orbis Cascade Alliance and Colorado Alliance
Shared Print programs are one of the most important collaborative activities being pursued by many regional library groups. The Orbis Cascade Alliance (Oregon, Washington, and Idaho) and Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries (Colorado and Wyoming) each have multi-state regional programs which demonstrate unique characteristics and features. In the Orbis Cascade Alliance, librarians are having to re-visit historic shared purchases. They will explore one such project and examine steps taken to reconcile current institutional needs with past collection-building priorities. In the Colorado Alliance shared print program, a locally developed analysis tool called Gold Rush Library Content Comparison System has been developed to assist libraries in making better decisions about their shared print commitments.  The Colorado program will be reviewed, followed by a look at its analysis tool in terms of its underlying design principles, features, and challenges.  Different use cases will be explored as well as future opportunities for collaboration and development. As Shared Print programs expand and mature in the 21st Century, this presentation will outline some overall best practices for the ways in which we approach and manage these resource sharing agreements.

Speakers
avatar for Xan  Arch

Xan Arch

Director of Collection Services, Reed College
JB

Jim Brunnelle

Acquisitions/Collection Development Librarian, Lewis & Clark College
avatar for Jill Emery

Jill Emery

Collection Development & Management Librarian, Portland State University
I am the Collection Development Librarian at Portland State University Library and have over 20 years of academic library experience. I have held leadership positions in ALA ALCTS, ER&L, and NASIG. In 2015, I served as the ALA-NISO representative to vote on NISO/ISO standards on behalf... Read More →
YF

Yem Fong

Professor & Director, Scholarly Resource Development, University of Colorado Boulder Libraries
avatar for Michael Levine-Clark

Michael Levine-Clark

Dean of Libraries, University of Denver
avatar for George Machovec

George Machovec

Executive Director, Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries
I am the executive director of the Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries. My expertise revolves around library consortia, shared print programs, union catalogs and e-resource licensing. I am the managing editor of The Charleston Advisor/ccAdvisor.


Thursday November 5, 2015 4:45pm - 5:30pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

4:45pm EST

Text & Data Mining Contracts - The Issues & The Needs
For background see http://www.against-the-grain.com/2015/05/newschannel-original-text-mining-partnering-to-open-new-doors-to-big-data-research/

Last year Elsevier released new contract terms for Text & Data Mining of their collections. This was met with criticism and confusion. So, how is a library best able to contract for TDM to support their researchers? Hear from a key vendor, a consultant with experience in working out these agreements and the head of LIBER, a European collaboration that is working aggressively to resolve the issues that continue to confound most academics today.

Moderators
NH

Nancy Herther

Sociology/Anthropology Librarian, University of Minnesota

Speakers
IH

Iris Hanney

President, Unlimited Priorities LLC
SR

Susan Reilly

Executive Director, LIBER – Reinventing the Library for the Future
avatar for Alicia Wise

Alicia Wise

Director of Universal Access, Elsevier
Alicia is very passionate about expanding access to information, and particularly enjoys developing successful partnerships across complex stakeholder communities. Her areas of expertise lie at the intersection of copyright and digital technology. She joined Elsevier in June 2010... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 4:45pm - 5:30pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

6:00pm EST

Networking Happy Hour
Mix and mingle with other conference attendees over a beverage and a snack while visiting the Poster Sessions. Appetizers will be provided and a cash bar will be available to purchase beverages.

Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Outside Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

A Crossroads for Collection Development and Assessment, and Its’ “Fallout.” Where Do We Go From Gere?
My poster session will demonstrate with tightening budgets, changing workflows, and other pressures, we’re at an important crossroads for collection development and assessment, and its’ “fallout.” Where do we go from here?

Withdrawals, transfers, replacements, and gifts, all are key factors in collection maintenance and development. At the Albertson Library we have found that weeded collections and unneeded gifts open new horizons, which impact global literacy and contribute to the quality of life. Change and assessment must be sustainable; it must create its own momentum.

Poster highlights: Literacy partnerships are two-way relationships involving mutual planning and conduct of programs and projects. We believe that education and access to books are basic human rights. Working together, with our literacy partners, we cycle many of our withdrawn titles to help fund high-impact literacy projects. By finding old books new homes, we have created a sustainable solution for diverting books from landfills. BWB Donations and Discards program helps us manage and ease our workflows related to withdrawn books and unneeded gifts. We’ve partnered with Better World Books (BWB) http://www.betterworldbooks.com/ and our nonprofit literacy program, the Wisconsin/Nicaragua Partners of the Americas, Inc. http://www.wisnic.org/. The Library Book Sale includes selected gift books and older withdrawn titles of higher value. A percentage of proceeds from BWB and the Library Book sale are shared with - the Wisconsin/Nicaragua Partners of the Americas. The Library’s share of proceeds is used to support the purchase of CORE (Resources for College Library) items, thus enhancing key needs of our collections.

Speakers
TR

Tom Reich

Collection Development Coordinator/Head of Acquisitions, University of Wisconsin-Stevens Point


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Assessing DDA: Measuring Success for Strategic Objectives
As is common with other academic libraries, Case Western Reserve University spends approximately 20% of its annual materials budget on monographs and 80% on serial purchases. However, with a mostly flat budget and serial inflation, selecting librarians must be hyper-aware of monographic purchasing decisions and their justification. In 2012, the Kelvin Smith Library conducted a Demand-Driven Acquisitions pilot for both physical and electronic books in an effort to offer a breadth of scholarly material to faculty and students in a cost-effective way. This poster presentation will cover assessment of the DDA pilot as it compares to firm order titles purchased within the two year time period in which the DDA pilot ran. Considerations will include user format preference, circulation and usage statistics, cost-per-use, peer comparisons, user behavior, and strategic decisions.

Speakers
avatar for Stephanie Church

Stephanie Church

Acquisitions Librarian, Case Western Reserve University, Kelvin Smith Library
Stephanie serves as Acquisitions Librarian on the Acquisitions & Metadata Services Team at Case Western Reserve University's Kelvin Smith Library. She is responsible for placing orders for books, videos, and e-books with vendors and for maintaining excellent relationships with our... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Assessing Relative Collection Strength Across Institutions: An Analysis of Memorial University of Newfoundland's Irish Studies Collection
Most, if not all, academic collections librarians are experiencing or have experienced the need to adjust their spending and collections activities to adhere to decreasing funds and resources as publisher prices increase, the value of the dollar fluctuates, and library budgets remain unchanged. If you are a collections librarian, however, and you have a vested interest in maintaining the strength of your valued collections despite the decreased funds available to ideally maintain them, you’re probably also searching for ways to make every dollar count. 

Knowing the strength of your collections, as well as the strength of the collections of other libraries, is a great way to determine the best way to spend collections budgets: strengthen our weaker areas, and maintain our strong areas. Given that tools designed for cross-institutional overlap projects can be expensive, I’ve been looking at ways to use some of the unique features of the tools we own to run effective analyses. I’ve also been looking to free, open source resources to use in this project. I started “small,” with an analysis of our holdings in Postcolonial Studies, and am now treading the deep waters of our very large, grant-winning, and nationally and internationally recognized Irish Studies collection. 

In June of 2015, I presented my Postcolonial findings at the annual conference of the Atlantic Provinces Library Association (APLA). By November, I will have completed my analysis of our Irish Studies collection, and I would like to present these findings at this year's Charleston Conference.

Speakers
avatar for Amanda Tiller-Hackett

Amanda Tiller-Hackett

Humanities Collection Development Librarian, Queen Elizabeth II Library, Memorial University of Newfoundland
Amanda Tiller-Hackett is the Humanities Collection Development Librarian at Memorial University of Newfoundland’s Queen Elizabeth II Library. In this role, she manages collections in English Language and Literature, Linguistics, French, and the General Humanities which includes... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Back to the Future: Upgrading your VHS Collection for Increased Space & Accessiblity
While VHS media is still heavily present in academic library collections, the format has rapidly become obsolete over the last decade. With the inadequate supply of VCR’s and the physical deterioration of the VHS tapes, access to this content is becoming increasingly limited for library users.
In this poster session, the methodology and steps used to complete a 7000+ title VHS upgrade pilot project, as well as the valuable lessons learned, will be presented. It will detail the necessary steps, key players, timeline, and financial responsibilities the University of British Columbia – Okanagan Campus Library took to complete this project. In addition, the poster will look at the impact this type of project has on a library’s collection development, access, digital reformatting, copyright clearance, and distributor relationships. Examples will highlight how the decisions were made for withdrawal, repurchasing on DVD or out of region formats, reformatting through an outside company, or keeping the VHS. Discussion will include lessons learned and unexpected barriers and benefits, including the creation of new student study space. Overall, this poster will target how they each related to increasing access to collections for the different user groups of the library and how this type of project could be replicated in other libraries.

Speakers
avatar for Arielle Lomness

Arielle Lomness

Interim Associate Chief Librarian, Research & Collections, University of British Columbia



Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Data-driven Approach for Supporting Day-to-Day and Strategic Decisions
Increasingly under pressure to demonstrate their value to their institution, libraries need creative ways to improve efficiency and productivity. Powerful analytic capabilities enable libraries to put numbers on their value and to expose tangible evidence of their leading role in the academic lifecycle. Valuable insight into libraries’ operations and user behavior can be gained via purchasing trends, comparative analysis, and even predictive analysis. We will explore ways in which analytical analysis from the library resource management solution, the discovery interface, and their combination, can take libraries into the next generation.

Speakers
avatar for Denise Branch

Denise Branch

Head of Electronic and Continuing Resources, Virginia Commonwealth University Libraries
Denise is the Head of Electronic and Continuing Resources at the VCU Libraries. Managing e-resources, including journals and databases within the Ex Libris Alma and Primo systems keeps her busy. She contributes her expertise for licensing, ordering, receiving and maintaining the Libraries... Read More →
avatar for Andrew French

Andrew French

Director of Sales Operations, Ex Libris


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Eliminating Barriers: 7 Best Practices For Creating a User Friendly Library Website
In a recent EBSCO survey to undergraduates, 40% of respondents stated that the library website was moderate to very challenging. 15% of respondents stated that they never use the library website.

An effective library website is critical to a user's research workflow and general understanding of the library's resources and sources. If the user finds the library website daunting then s/he may not a.) conduct an efficient and effective research, b.) have a full understanding of the value of the library, or c.) use it. This poster provides library staff especially those responsible for usability with recommended tips and tools for ensuring that students have a positive experience when using their library website. Common library website issues such as where to start, library jargon, navigation, content strategy, and accessibility will be addressed with the poster.

Speakers
KG

Khalilah Gambrell

FOLIO PO Lead, EBSCO Information Services


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

How Weeding Adds Value to Library Collections: Weighing the Cost of Weeding and the Cost of Keeping Books
Weeding in libraries is often like the gardening chore it is named for: sweaty hours spent among dirty tangles to clear out messy undergrowth and remove unwanted materials. But the analogy stops there - the intellectual pursuit of a well-managed collection includes much more than identifying and removing materials from the shelf. In fact, the daunting, many-faceted weeding process can keep librarians from tackling this very crucial task. A collection left unassessed, left to grow ungainly, is also a missed opportunity to add value, and real cost savings, to the collection through weeding. Santa Clara University Library undertook a reference weeding project in 2013/14; library staff reviewed and relocated over 7,800 titles. Goals were to make the reference collection more relevant to current research needs and to redesign the library's first floor to create more high-demand user space. The project involved multiple library units with multiple workflows, with staff including librarians, paraprofessionals, and student workers. This poster presents detailed data on the cost of weeding a book in a mid-sized academic library, based on staff-time estimated during this project and national wage averages. These data, when compared to the “Cost of Keeping a Book” (by Courant and Nielsen, 2010), demonstrate the value associated with weeding and how, by acknowledging the cost associated with keeping a book, libraries can make evidenced-based decisions that may incentivize the weeding process and perhaps even lead to a more cost effective migration to building ebook collections.

Speakers
avatar for Tina E Chrzastowski

Tina E Chrzastowski

Head of Access & Delivery Services, Santa Clara University Library
avatar for Jessica Harris

Jessica Harris

Head of Electronic Resources & Serials, Santa Clara University Library



Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

I Have All These E-Books...Now What?
While electronic journals have long been the staple in collection development, the Mississippi State University College of Veterinary Medicine has recently opted for an electronic preferred model of collection development for all monographs even when print formats are available. This transition was made, in part, to serve students, faculty, researchers, and clinicians in the field who do not have immediate access to the physical library. This poster will display the results of a close examination of quantitative data gathered to determine the outcome of an electronic preference for monographs and the impact of this collection development policy on the CVM Library. The data examined will include usage statistics for specific user populations and cost analysis of the collection. While there are many factors in creating a collection development policy, librarians considering opting for an electronic preferred policy may consider the available evaluative data to determine if such a policy would suit their users and their collections. This poster will discuss the effects of the transition to an electronic preference in a niche monographic collection and what these effects may reveal for the future of collection development.

Speakers
DM

Derek Marshall

Coordinator of the College of Veterinary Medicine Library, Mississippi State University


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Integrated Assessment for Informed Collection Management
In June 2015, the Kennesaw State University Library System launched a pilot implementation of a newly conceived Collection Assessment Plan. The plan follows a 5-year rotating schedule for systematically reviewing print holdings of the KSU Library System. It is broad in scope, spans multiple library departments, and integrates into operational workflows. Project contributors include Undergraduate Faculty Liaisons and Graduate Librarians as well as staff and student employees from Access Services, Technical Services, and Interlibrary Loan. In all, 36 employees distributed over four library locations will participate in this much-needed collection assessment and maintenance project.

This proposed model of collection assessment endorses the idea that assessment is best employed when fully integrated into collection workflows and procedures, and distributed among staff that make decisions about selection and withdrawal. Ultimately, the plan seeks to provide a structure for improved decision-making and strategic collection growth, while recognizing that no single metric is sufficient to serve all of these roles. Rather, it investigates multiple aspects of the collection, including use, patron perception, holdings analysis, areas of existing need, core title list comparisons, and peer benchmarks.

Speakers
avatar for Ana Guimaraes

Ana Guimaraes

Director of Collection Development, Kennesaw State University Library System
Ana Guimaraes is the Director of Collection Development for the Kennesaw State University Library System. She has a Master of Science in Library and Information Science (MSLIS) from Syracuse University and a Bachelor of Arts in Theatre/English from the State University of New York... Read More →
ML

Michael Luther

Assessment Librarian, Kennesaw State University


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Keep Those Book Trucks Rolling: Strategies for a Major Move of the Library Collection
The University Libraries at Virginia Tech recently completed an extensive move of the physical collection and reduction of the footprint of the stacks in our main facility. This session will relate key elements of what we learned during this multi-year process and share tips and strategies for an effective and efficient large-scale move. Attendees can see ways to address such issues as project management, communications, staffing, identifying materials for storage or deselection, and processing of materials. Visuals such as a workflow chart, project timeline, and before and after photographs will help graphically convey the process and how it may be applied elsewhere.

Speakers
avatar for Ladd Brown

Ladd Brown

Head of Acquisitions, Virginia Tech
A lot of things have changed in the thirty-odd years Ladd has been in the library biz. Not being able to smoke at your desk in Tech Services anymore is one of the biggies.
avatar for Edward Lener

Edward Lener

Associate Director for Collection Management, Virginia Tech
Edward Lener is Associate Director of Collection Management in the University Libraries at Virginia Tech and College Librarian for the Sciences. Edward is the university's representative to the Collections Committee of the VIVA library consortium and a co-author of the book Graduate... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Looking Back and Moving Forward: A Multi-Year Circulation Statistical Story
In the past few years, Georgia Southern University (GSU) have been assessing its collection to guide any updates to collection development policies. In particular, the print monograph collection was pinpointed to confirm (or deny) the decreasing circulation trends in the library. Since the library switched to the Voyager system in early 2000, this date provided an opportunity as a starting point in examining print monograph circulation trends, thus, resulting in a fairly robust multi-year statistical data. In analyzing the data, three areas of inquiry were identified: 1. Overall circulation statistical trend; 2. Subject-specific trends; and 3. Publication year and its circulation trend. What does this data tells us? How does this affect collection development policies? In part of this analysis and coupled with budgetary concerns, collection development especially resource print monograph acquisition at GSU was updated to reflect changing circulation statistics. Starting this year, the library will move away from “just in case” to “just in time” to strategically align stakeholders’ needs and the library’s sustainability. Hence, the library looks into the future of collection development.

In this poster, attendees will be engage in the discussion of changing library acquisition models through a multi-year circulation statistical data.

Speakers
avatar for Paolo P. Gujilde

Paolo P. Gujilde

Assistant Head of Acquisitions, Northwestern University


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Music on Demand
This poster will explore the process of developing a unique pilot PDA program for print music scores and monographs from concept to reality at an ARL institution, describing collection development considerations, IT infrastructure needs; implementation issues; request and acquisitions workflows; and plan evaluation. In 2014 collection management and acquisitions a at the George A. Smathers Libraries at the University of Florida approached Harrassowitz, Booksellers and Subscription Agents regarding utilizing the vendors approval and new title announcement profiles to build a print PDA plan that would support the teaching, learning, and research needs of the musicology faculty. Though some academic libraries, including the Smathers Libraries, had implemented print PDA plans for monographs, no example of a plan for music scores could be identified. In addition, Harrassowitz did not support print PDA plans, but was willing to experiment with UF on a pilot basis. The poster intends to examine how partnering with vendors to implement innovative collection building plans, based on current trends in acquisition methods, can support both the needs of users and the goals of libraries through a method that offers an increase in access to materials in a fiscally responsible way. Session attendees can expect to learn about the opportunities and challenges the library and vendor faced in planning and implementing the plan, plan outcomes and evaluation, and what next steps will be taken. Attendees will be able to ask questions and engage in discussion with the librarians responsible for building and managing the plan.

Speakers
AA

Alan Asher

Music, Theatre, Dance Librarian, University of Florida
AL

Ann Lindell

Head, Architecture & Fine Arts Library, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida
avatar for Trey Shelton

Trey Shelton

E-Resources Librarian, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida
I am the E-Resources & Acqusitions Librarian at the George A. Smathers Libraries at the University of Florida. I have been with the Smathers Libraries since 2010, and in my current role since 2012. I received my MLS from the University of South Florida in 2009. My primary research... Read More →


Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Return on Instruction: Methods for Assessing the Impact of Information Literacy Instruction on the Use of Electronic Resources
Moving from simplistic, open web search strategies sufficient for high school level work to independently navigating the complex system of information sources available on college campuses is a developmental milestone for undergraduate students. One of the aims of library instruction is to play a critical role in this transition to college-level research, which necessitates the use of specialized databases and other information sources. Instruction librarians raise awareness of library e-resources and provide in-depth guidance in selecting and effectively using online sources. Santa Clara University librarians were interested in investigating the immediate impact of instruction on the use of the library’s e-resources. Do students regularly use library resources after instruction or do they revert to open web sources when searching independently?

To study this question, Santa Clara University librarians examined LibGuides statistics, usage data, and instruction data to determine how frequently students access library databases post-instruction. The investigators examined LibGuides associated with course instruction from a selection of classes and explored the potential impact of instructional techniques, timing of instruction, and assignment integration on sustained use of electronic resources. The investigators also examined use of resources by level of course to explore whether independent use of library resources increased as students progress through their college years.

This poster will share methodologies for assessing use of library e-resources after instruction using LibGuides statistics combined with usage and instruction data. The poster will also explore opportunities for implementing this method to assess instruction, access, and use of e-resources on college campuses.

Speakers
avatar for Nicole Branch

Nicole Branch

Dean, University Library, Santa Clara University
Nicole Branch is Head of Instruction & Assessment at Santa Clara University in Santa Clara, California. In this role, Nicole coordinates the library’s assessment program and serves as the subject librarian for the departments of anthropology, sociology, and the University’s Miller... Read More →
avatar for Elizabeth McKeigue

Elizabeth McKeigue

Associate University Librarian, Santa Clara University
Elizabeth McKeigue is the Associate University Librarian for Learning & Engagement at Santa Clara University in California. In this role, she oversees activities related to research, teaching, outreach, assessment, and access & delivery services. Prior to 2010, Ms. McKeigue held positions... Read More →



Thursday November 5, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

7:00pm EST

Annual Charleston Conference Reception
Charleston is well known for its hospitality, and the Annual Reception is a true Charleston affair! The reception this year will be held at the South Carolina Aquarium. Delicious lowcountry specialties as well as more familiar reception fare, will be served. More information to come!

Thursday November 5, 2015 7:00pm - 9:00pm EST
South Carolina Aquarium
 
Friday, November 6
 

7:00am EST

Registration Check-In
Please check in upon arrival to receive your name badge and attendee materials. Name badges will be required for entry into conference venues, the reception, and conference shuttles.

Friday November 6, 2015 7:00am - 6:00pm EST
Upper Lobby, Francis Marion Hotel

7:00am EST

Registration Check-In
Please check in upon arrival to receive your name badge and attendee materials. Name badges will be required for entry into conference venues, the reception, and conference shuttles.

Friday November 6, 2015 7:00am - 6:00pm EST
Upper Lobby, Francis Marion Hotel

7:30am EST

Continental Breakfast
Join us for a light breakfast prior to the morning plenary sessions.

Friday November 6, 2015 7:30am - 8:30am EST
Outside Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

8:30am EST

Opening Remarks
Speakers
avatar for Katina Strauch

Katina Strauch

Founder and Convener, Charleston Conference


Friday November 6, 2015 8:30am - 8:35am EST
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

8:35am EST

Needle-Moving Collaboration: From Act to Impact
Drawing from the disciplines of sociology and economics, Skinner will explore both established and emergent models for system-wide transformation. Beginning with the premise that publishing today is an unstable environment, one where the key constants are change and uncertainty, Skinner will ask what we might accomplish if we shifted some of our attention from institutional concerns to system-level transformation. System-change models are being used to great effect in other arenas, and Skinner will illustrate a few of those and talk about ways that we might build bridges across all of the relevant players--publishers, libraries, content managers, and authors--in order to pursue a more stable field together.



 

Speakers
avatar for Katherine Skinner

Katherine Skinner

Executive Director, Educopia Institute
Dr. Katherine Skinner is the Executive Director of the Educopia Institute, a not-for-profit educational organization that empowers collaborative communities to create, share, and preserve knowledge. She has helped to found the MetaArchive Cooperative, a community-owned and commun... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 8:35am - 9:15am EST
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

9:15am EST

The Long Arm of the Law
Abstract TBA

Moderators
avatar for Ann Okerson

Ann Okerson

Senior Advisor, Center for Research Libraries
Throughout my work at the Yale University Library and also the Center for Research Libraries, the opportunities and challenges facing international librarianship have had a compelling interest for me.  For 25 years, I've also worked on these issues through participation in IFLA (the... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for William M. Hannay

William M. Hannay

Partner, Schiff Hardin LLP
Bill Hannay regularly counsels corporations and individuals with respect to federal and state antitrust law, intellectual property law, and other trade regulation laws. He is an Adjunct Professor, teaching courses at IIT/Chicago-Kent law school in antitrust and international business... Read More →
avatar for Lisa Macklin

Lisa Macklin

Assoc Vice Provost & University Librarian, Emory University
Lisa A. Macklin joined Emory in 2005 and was appointed the Associate Vice Provost and University Librarian October 2022.  She previously served as the Interim Dean and University Librarian from November 2021.  She served as the Associate Dean of Research, Engagement, and Scholarly... Read More →
avatar for Gary Price

Gary Price

Founder/Editor, infoDOCKET, Editor, ARL Day in Review
Gary Price is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area.  He is currently the Resource and Reference Center Director for GIJN and editor of infoDOCKET.com, a daily update of news and new research tools.He lives near Washington... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 9:15am - 10:10am EST
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

10:10am EST

Refreshment Break
Friday November 6, 2015 10:10am - 10:30am EST
Outside Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

10:30am EST

Don’t Get Married to the Results: Managing Library Change in the Age of Metrics
One of the greatest challenges facing directors at libraries of all levels is measuring success of new or existing programs or services. This is especially challenging to new directors who are conflicted between the culture of assessment and the need to demonstrate the value of the changes or programs at one’s library. The more entrepreneurial a director is, the more difficult it might be to measure the results. As a library director for nearly nine years, I have built a personal leadership toolkit based on a variety of resources. We have gone through a tremendous change in the nine years that I have been director at Kresge, including losing both collections and student space during the past year. Moving the library from a traditional entity into an ethereal one (as I like to call it) requires an approach that is entrepreneurial and unconventional. To that end, the direction that we have pursued in this (and other) changes implemented at our library has been crafted with an open mind to metrics and assessment. Rather than start a process with preconceived measure of success, instead it is something that we review and assess as we go. Us the phrase “don’t get married to the results,” I will share how I have used this to frame success in the library, especially in light of great change and upheaval.

Speakers
avatar for Corey Seeman

Corey Seeman

Director, Kresge Library Services, University of Michigan
Corey Seeman is the Director of Kresge Library Services of the Ross School of Business at the University of Michigan. The unit has recently undergone a great transformation from a traditional library to an electronic-only library service group with the completion of the Ross Construction... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 10:30am - 11:15am EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

10:30am EST

GOBI, YBP & Overdrive - Changes in the Book Distribution Landscape
For background see http://www.against-the-grain.com/2015/03/atg-original-bt-ebsco-ybp-more-changes-to-distribution-channels/; http://www.against-the-grain.com/2015/06/newschannel-original-proquest-works-to-strengthen-services-to-academe-with-acquisition-of-sipx/ ; and http://newsbreaks.infotoday.com/NewsBreaks/Rakuten-and-OverDrive-Building-a-Major-Global-Ebook-Platform-103040.asp

This past year has seen many strategic changes to book distribution to libraries. In this session ProQuest's CEO Kurt Sanford (which has just acquired SIPX) and OverDrive's President & CEO Steve Potash (which was acquired by Japanese corporate giant Rakuten) will discuss their strategic moves along with consultant Dan Tonkery who will provide analysis and commentary on what this means for the future of book distribution in libraries.

Moderators
NH

Nancy Herther

Sociology/Anthropology Librarian, University of Minnesota

Speakers
avatar for Steve Potash

Steve Potash

President, OverDrive
Steve Potash is President and CEO of OverDrive, Inc., a company that he founded in 1986. Under his leadership, OverDrive has become a leading global platform for eBooks, audiobooks and other digital media to a network of thousands of libraries, schools and retailers in more than... Read More →
KS

Kurt Sanford

President, ProQuest
avatar for Dan Tonkery

Dan Tonkery

CEO, Content Strategy


Friday November 6, 2015 10:30am - 11:15am EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

10:30am EST

The Young and the Restless: Fresh Eyes Scan the Library-Publishing Landscape
A panel of young professionals in academic libraries and scholarly publishing will be asked to share their views on the institutions they’ve recently joined, the current state of information services, library-vendor relations, and how they think their long futures in the scholarly information space might play out. This program is intending to provide a window into the hearts and minds of relative newcomers to the Charleston space; to hear where these young’uns might drive us if their bosses were to toss them the car keys.

Speakers
avatar for Mara Blake

Mara Blake

Spatial and Numeric Data Librarian, University of Michigan
As a spatial and numeric data library, I work on building our library collections of geospatial data and providing better discoverability and access to the collection. I also work with researchers using numeric, qualitative, and geospatial data technologies in their research and... Read More →
avatar for Hannah Scates Kettler

Hannah Scates Kettler

Digital Humanities Librarian, University of Iowa Libraries
Currently involved in public digital scholarship and pedagogy, social media, 3D digital representation and visualization, games and gaming, access and dissemination of higher education and research and big data archaeology.
avatar for Jen Maurer

Jen Maurer

Library Sales Manager, Cambridge University Press
avatar for Mark Sandler

Mark Sandler

Director, CIC Center for Library Initiatives, Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC)
Mark Sandler is the Director of the Center for Library Initiatives at the Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC). He is interested in how libraries, publishers and users are managing the transition from print to electronic resources, with particular focus on the collaborative... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 10:30am - 11:15am EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

A Library-Publisher Partnership for Open Access: Building an Innovative Relationship between Scholarly Publishers and Libraries
As the importance of open access continues to grow, there remains no clear consensus on the ideal model to sustain scholarly publishing while making content openly accessible. Can a solution be found that meets the needs of both the scholarly publishers and university libraries? The Érudit Consortium and the Canadian Research Knowledge Network (CRKN) are exploring one solution to this challenge through a strategic partnership, which aims to address two major challenges: the fragility of the Canadian scholarly publishing environment and the increasing pressure from libraries and funding agencies for scholarly journals to move towards open access. The session will present the perspectives of the two partner organizations, outlining the common goals, objectives, and strategy, as well as the differing needs and perspectives of libraries and publishers. It will summarize the steps taken to achieve this partnership, the success factors, the challenges faced, and the next steps.

• Attendees will learn more about how university libraries can play an active role in developing models to support open access to research
• Attendees will gain insight that may allow them to address other types of challenges in a collaborative fashion
• Attendees will gain an understanding of the challenges facing publishers and libraries in the Canadian publishing environment

Speakers
avatar for Joanie Lavoie

Joanie Lavoie

Director of Operations, Érudit Consortium
Joanie Lavoie is Director of Operations (Directrice des operations) of the Érudit Consortium, located in Montreal, Quebec. After completing her studies in literature and publishing, as well as a Masters in Arts and Culture management, she decided to apply her keen interest in the... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

11:35am EST

An Account and Analysis of the Implementation of Various E-Book Business Models at QUT, Australia
QUT (Queensland University of Technology) is a leading university based in the city of Brisbane, Queensland, Australia and is a selectively research intensive university with 2,500 higher degree research students and an overall student population of 45,000 students.

The transition from print to online resources is largely completed and the library now provides access to 450,000 print books, 1,000 print journals, 600,000 ebooks, 120,000 ejournals and 100,000 online videos. The ebook collection is now used three times as much as the print book collection.

This paper focuses on QUT Library’s ebook strategy and the challenges of building and managing a rapidly growing collection of ebooks using a range of publishers, platforms, and business and financial models. The paper provides an account of QUT Library’s experiences in using library book agent services in the provision of e-preferred approval plans for automated selection and shelf-ready services; the use of Patron Driven Acquisition (PDA) using eBook Library (EBL); the strategic procurement of publisher and subject collections by lease and outright purchase models, and the more recent transition to Evidence Based Selection (EBS) options provided by some publishers. The paper provides an in-depth analysis of each of these business models at QUT, focusing on collection development, usage, cost per use, and value for money. The adoption of open access business models including Knowledge Unlatched is also explored.
Reference is also made to the adoption of commercial courseware provided by some traditionally book publishers, and how the Library can support the adoption of these services.

Speakers
MB

Martin Borchert

Associate Director, Library Services (Information Resources and Research Support), QUT (Queensland University of Technology)
avatar for John Lenahan

John Lenahan

VP, Published Content, JSTOR
Supporting the publishing and discovery of academic content.  I am interested in supporting cost effective ways to publish academic content, support publisher needs and to help libraries get to the content important to them at the lowest possible cost.


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Are We Doing Enough?: Four Stories of Diversity in Library Collections
Do your collections reflect the diversity of your constituents? Are you equipped to meet the diverse needs of future users? In light of budgetary and spatial challenges, diversity in collections may not be a priority for most libraries. Yet, changing demographics practically ensures that there will be an increase in the demand for diverse materials. See how librarians from 4 different types of academic institutions from 4 different regions have been dealing with (or not) with this issue.

Alburo will talk about how area studies collections brings a global perspective to a Tier 1 university in the West Coast while Beh will present the challenges of building a diverse collection at a Tier 1 STEM institution in the East Coast. Gong will discuss how a Midwestern community college with a non-diverse library collection is scrambling to acquire recent materials as it is faced by new needs from underrepresented groups, and Gujilde will talk about how he is looking for opportunities to change the lack of diversity in the collection at his comprehensive state university in the South.

Attendees will leave with a better understanding of the collection development issues related to diversity. We will leave enough time for the audience to share their own experiences, challenges, and successes so that we can all come away with an even wider range of possible ideas to implement in our own institutions.

Speakers
avatar for Jade Alburo

Jade Alburo

Librarian for Southeast Asian and Pacific Islands Studies, University of California, Los Angeles
Jade Alburo is the Librarian for Southeast Asian and Pacific Islands Studies at UCLA. In 2017-2019, she was Interim Reference and Outreach Coordinator for the Charles E. Young Research Library. She was the coordinator of the 2016 National Diversity in Libraries Conference, President... Read More →
avatar for Eugenia Beh

Eugenia Beh

Scholarly Communications and Licensing Librarian, MIT Libraries
Eugenia Beh is the Scholarly Communications and Licensing Librarian at the MIT Libraries. 
avatar for Regina Gong

Regina Gong

Open Educational Resources (OER) Project Manager & Manager of Technical Services and Systems, Lansing Community College
I'm a librarian and the OER Project Manager at Lansing Community College. I would love to talk to you about your OER projects and how it has impacted student learning and faculty's teaching in your campuses. I'm also one of the Open Education Group Research Fellow for 2017-2018 and... Read More →
avatar for Paolo P. Gujilde

Paolo P. Gujilde

Assistant Head of Acquisitions, Northwestern University



Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

11:35am EST

Balancing Bananas: Collection Assessment of Patron-Driven Acquisitions
The University of Colorado Boulder participated in one of the first patron-driven acquisition (PDA) pilots in the late 1990s. During the pilot, CU-Boulder triggered a substantial number of books about bananas as the result of an undergraduate research assignment. The pilot was largely considered a failure because of the rapid rate at which funds were expended and because it resulted in the selection of materials that were deemed inappropriate for the collection. However, it also demonstrated user demand for e-books and illustrated the librarians’ role in the selection of materials in academic libraries.

In 2010, CU Boulder revisited patron-driven acquisitions (PDA) and launched a consortia pilot for the CU system. Unlike the initial pilot, the current PDA model utilizes custom, subject-based profiles to identify content within the scope of our collection development policies. While this mediated version of PDA has increased our libraries’ comfort level, it is unclear if PDA is working for all subjects or different types of libraries.

This presentation will explore how PDA has impacted collection building at each library in the CU System. Which subjects are loading the most records and triggering the most purchases; which library is triggering those purchases; and how does a library analyze the impact of a PDA e-book program on the print book collection? Are we building collections that support the teaching and research needs of our campuses given existing resources? If we aren’t purchasing banana books, what do we have instead?

Speakers
avatar for Rhonda Glazier

Rhonda Glazier

Director of Collections Management, University of Colorado, Colorado Springs
Ms. Glazier is the Director of Collections Management at the University of Colorado, Colorado Springs and has worked in libraries for over twenty-five years. She has worked in both public and academic libraries with the majority of her work focusing on the traditional areas of technical... Read More →
avatar for Gabrielle Wiersma

Gabrielle Wiersma

Head of Collection Development, University of Colorado Boulder



Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Citadel Green Room, Embassy Suites

11:35am EST

Collecting Ideas on Collecting: How to Edit a Collected Work from Concept to Publication
Collection development librarians face many challenges in the rapidly changing environment of scholarly publications. One approach is to investigate other librarians’ experiences —and then compile the solutions in a special journal issue or book of collected essays. The authors have experience compiling collected works and are eager share tips and techniques to encourage others to accept the rewarding challenge of compiling an edited work in collection development. Steps include:
• Developing an idea
• Deciding whether to edit solo or with a team
• Finding a publisher
• Writing the proposal
• Setting goals and deadlines
• Working with a style guide
• Soliciting contributions and/or sending out a call for papers
• Selecting papers
• Communicating with authors
• Editing papers
• Communicating with the publisher

Speakers
avatar for Judith M. Nixon

Judith M. Nixon

Education Librarian, Purdue University
Judith M. Nixon is currently a professor and the liaison librarian to the College of Education at Purdue University. Most of her research has focused on development and evaluation of library collections, and she is the co-editor of Collection Management. Over her 30-plus-year career... Read More →
avatar for Suzanne Ward

Suzanne Ward

Collection Strategist, Purdue University
My interests include e-books, patron-driven acquisitions, print retention, and professional writing.


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Cooper Room, Courtyard Marriott

11:35am EST

Collections as a Service
We are living through a cultural transition from print to digital with stakeholders in scholarly communication required to navigate a dynamic, hybrid environment. The session will outline the philosophical approach used by a large ARL to conceive of ‘collections as a service’ as a guiding principle in shaping collection development decisions both internally and within broader collaborative networks. Data on usage of both print and online collections are regularly analyzed and inform these decisions, with the data sometimes running counter to anecdotal or self-reported preferences by users for print over digital formats.

The session has two objectives: to give the audience a better understanding of how a large academic research library is responding to the changing conditions in scholarly communications and user preferences, and to show practical ways that data is being used to guide that process. The session will include (if possible) a live demonstration of library use data using a visualization application (Tableau). There will be time provided for Q&A so the audience can respond to the session and ask further questions.

This session is proposed as a single presentation, but it could be structured as a panel session by seeking to include a speaker from another academic research library and/or a publisher.

Speakers
avatar for Daniel Dollar

Daniel Dollar

AUL for Scholarly Resources, Yale University
Daniel Dollar is the Associate University Librarian for Scholarly Resources at Yale Library. Daniel joined Yale in August 2001 as a reference and e-resources librarian at the Cushing/Whitney Medical Library, and from there has taken on a succession of positions with increasing responsibilities... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

11:35am EST

Combined Title TBA: Merging 'E-Book Tune-up' and 'For the love of e-books: How skeptical academic librarians came to embrace books made of bits'
Combined abstract TBA

Speakers
avatar for Nathan Carlson

Nathan Carlson

Eresources & Discovery Librarian, Metropolitan State University
avatar for Janet Nazar

Janet Nazar

Coordinator of Content Management/Collection Services, Furman University Library
I serve as the Coordinator of Content Management in Collection Services at the J.B. Duke Library, Furman University in Greenville, SC. I have worked at the Furman library for 14 years and have experience in cataloging, electronic resources management and acquisitions. On a personal... Read More →
avatar for Caroline C Mills PhD

Caroline C Mills PhD

Director of Libraries, Furman University
Caroline Mills has over 20 years of academic library experience serving most recently as Assistant Director for Collection Services at Furman University in Greenville, South Carolina. Caroline has a Masters in Information and Library Science from the University of South Carolina and... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Developing Collaborative Connections - Faculty, Researchers, and Librarians
The health of an institution’s research program depends on how well the entire campus ecosystem manages the research process and scholarly output. Increased competition for funds and greater demand by funders for impact reporting makes it critical for research institutions to consolidate disparate internal data sources like repositories, finance data and faculty profiles. Research management systems make connecting faculty activity to other campus systems easy and simplify the reporting and showcasing processes. Within the university, the library is uniquely positioned to lead implementation of a campus-wide research management system because of the library’s neutral position and expertise in maintaining bibliographic information, disambiguating people and concepts and using metadata to discover relationships.

This panel will explore how different libraries have implemented a research management system on their campuses. Panelists will discuss how to capture research output beyond journal articles, how to get humanities researchers to buy into the system and how to effectively partner across the campus to support both faculty and administration.

Speakers
avatar for Jan Fransen

Jan Fransen

Service Lead for Research Information Management Systems, University of Minnesota
Talk to me about researcher information systems (like Experts@Minnesota!), discovery systems (especially Primo/Primo Central), and the role libraries might play in students' success.
avatar for Beth Namachchivaya

Beth Namachchivaya

Associate University Librarian for Research, University of Illinois at Urbana Champaign
KO

Kelechi Okere

Global Director, Seamless Access Initiative, Elsevier
I have been at Elsevier for close to 19yrs. I worked in sales much of that time selling most of Elsevier's products. Since last year, I have been working on a project investigating the feasibility of federated access as a primary access method to library e-resources.
GT

Gretchen Trkay

Department Head of Outreach and Scholarship, UT Arlington
avatar for Ashley Zmau

Ashley Zmau

Serials Cataloging and Metadata Librarian, Dallas County Community College District
Ashley is the Serials Cataloging and Metadata Librarian for the Dallas County Community College District. She is the co-author of Electronic Resources Librarianship a Practical Guide for Librarians and the forthcoming Electronic Resources Troubleshooting. Previously, Ashley was the... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

How Much do Monographs Cost? And Why Should We Care?
What does it cost to make a high quality, digital monograph? What may sound like an obvious question turns out to be a very knotty one, driving to the heart of the essence of scholarly publishing today. It is particularly relevant in an environment where the potential of a sustainable Open Access business model for monographs is being explored. Two complementary studies funded by The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation in 2015, have explored this question to understand the costs involved in creating and disseminating scholarly books.

The team at Ithaka S+R studied the full costs of publishing monographs by gathering cost data on a sample of nearly 400 titles across 20 presses. This process involved working both with directors, CFOS and many operational staff to understand the way staff time and effort contribute to the publishing process.

At Michigan and Indiana, a top-down model was used to identify those costs related to monograph publishing at the University of Michigan Press and Indiana University Press. Focus groups and interviews were conducted with faculty and administrators to explore institutional openness to a flipped business model where the costs of producing a monograph would be borne by the author’s parent institution.

Speakers
avatar for Meredith Kahn

Meredith Kahn

Librarian for Gender & Sexuality Studies, University of Michigan
Women's, gender, and sexuality studies; scholarly communication
avatar for Nancy Maron

Nancy Maron

President, BlueSky to BluePrint, LLC
Independent consultant, researcher and strategist, helping publishers and leaders of digital initiatives develop strong business plans and sound funding models.
avatar for Charles Watkinson

Charles Watkinson

Director, University of Michigan Press, University of Michigan
I'm AUL for Publishing at University of Michigan Library and Director of University of Michigan Press. I'm particularly interested in next-gen institutional repositories, the future of ebook collections and acquisitions, and how books can also get to participate in the networked digital... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

Improving the Availability of ISSN – A Joint Project
This session will describe the 2015 pilot project and ongoing cooperation between the International ISSN Centre based in Paris and ProQuest to identify active titles without ISSN. The project is using Ulrich’s Periodicals Database as the initial resource. Under the supervision of the International Centre, national ISSN Centers determine whether the ISSN is simply missing, or has never been assigned. The outcome of the project will be a benefit to librarians, publishers, and vendors as more titles will have ISSN registered with the national and International ISSN Centres and in Ulrich’s Periodical Database. This will improve the electronic loading and matching of titles. Gaëlle Béquet, director of the International ISSN Centre, and Laurie Kaplan of ProQuest will discuss how the project came to be, the pilot work and refinements to the process, and the ongoing work and schedule for going forward. The audience will be encouraged to ask questions and help determine the best way to encourage all interested parties to use the ISSN as identifier whenever possible.

Speakers
avatar for Gaelle Bequet

Gaelle Bequet

Director, ISSN International Centre
I am a librarian and a researcher in information science focusing on persistent identifiers, metadata quality, open science and digital preservation. I have been running the ISSN International Centre and coordinating its network of 93 member countries since 2014. I am a member of... Read More →
avatar for Laurie Kaplan

Laurie Kaplan

Sr. Project Manager, ProQuest
Laurie Kaplan, as Director of Editorial Operations at ProQuest, facilitates efforts of the international database and the Serials Provider Relations teams. Throughout her career of over a decade at ProQuest, Laurie has successfully directed the international data team responsible... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Embassy Suites

11:35am EST

Managing a Shared Print Repository: From Policy to Program
At the time of this conference, Georgia Tech and Emory University will likely have received the Certificate of Occupancy for the Library Service Center, a 4M volume capacity, climate controlled facility that houses and circulates a shared collection. We will provide an update on our activities from our presentation last year. Specifically, we will discuss numerous policies and procedures that we co-developed regarding:

1. collections: ingest procedures, bibliographic/database maintenance, de-duplicating materials, preservation, and circulation
2. discovery: the integration of the inventory control system with Alma
3. document delivery: daily deliveries to the two campuses, document delivery, and ILL
4. finance and administration: staffing, financing, and the management of the facility

A panel of managers from both Georgia Tech and Emory will talk about how these policies were developed within the framework of formal project management. These managers will also talk about how building a shared retrospective print collection served as an effective catalyst for prospective collection development between two very different, but complementary collections, libraries, and universities.

Outcome:

Through panel presentations and discussion participants will learn how managers at Tech and Emory have further developed our plans for a shared physical collection in a common repository and how we are thinking a about services for our respective users. Participants will learn how formal project management tools were leveraged to build trust in order to develop and codify decisions.

Speakers
JC

Jeff Carrico

Associate Dean for Scholarly Communication and Access, Georgia Tech
LM

Lars Meyer

Director, Access & Resource Services, Emory University
CS

Charles Spornick

Director, Services Division, Emory University
I am currently the interim head of the Services Division for the Woodruff Library- Emory's main library.   From 2004 through 2012 I was the head of collection management at Emory; from 1995 through 2004 I was the head of library’s Beck Center.   There he worked with worked... Read More →
avatar for Susan Stearns

Susan Stearns

Project Director, Eastern Academic Scholars' Trust (EAST)
Susan Stearns is the Project Director for the Eastern Academic Scholars' Trust (EAST) - www.eastlibraries.org) shared print program, a collaboration of over 130 academic and research libraries in the eastern United States to preserve and protect scholarly print titles.  EAST was... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

Measuring Open Access- Current State of the Art
The Open Access (OA) model for scientific publications has been examined for years by academics who have argued that it presents advantages in increasing accessibility and, consequently, in increasing the impact of papers.

It has been noted that OA availability has increased steadily over the years. However, current measurement has seriously underestimated the proportion of OA peer-reviewed articles. Therefore, it is necessary to develop new measurement methods. One challenge is to distinguish more clearly between Gold OA, Hybrid OA and non-fully Gold journals, and self-archiving (‘Green OA’).

This presentation examines the results of recent studies assessing the free availability of scholarly publications during different time periods and the proportion of Open Access Papers published in peer-reviewed journals at different levels. Different types of growth in freely available papers have been identified and analyzed.

In conclusion, best practices for institutional repository management will be mentioned and opportunities and challenges faced by the OA model will be examined. The audience is welcome to ask their question and share their feedback during the presentation.


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

Open Access: Integration or Segregation: Is there a role for database vendors?
Open Access is increasingly an essential component of academic scholarship and research. But where does Open Access content fit with the library’s academic databases – should Open Access play a role in the content set of vendors’ databases? Should OA be separate from these databases or integrated?
Join a lively panel discussion with two published experts in the field (academic librarians/faculty members) and two representatives from the vendor perspective (ProQuest staff). The panel session will utilize a state-of-the-art audience response system for engaging, real-time interaction with session attendees on questions such as: “What, if any, is the role of third party aggregators in providing access to OA?” “How much is too much OA in aggregated (paid) databases?” “What are discovery and usage pain points with OA – can vendors help with metadata for discovery, vetting quality titles, easier access to OA content in hybrid models?” We’ll lay out some issues, take in responses, and see real-time feedback from every participant. Open Access: Integration or Segregation? – Let’s find out!

Speakers
avatar for Kim Armstrong

Kim Armstrong

Deputy Director, CIC
Kimberly is currently Deputy Director, Center for Library Initiatives, at the Committee on Institutional Cooperation. The CIC, founded in 1958, is an academic consortium of the fourteen Big Ten universities and the University of Chicago. Her current responsibilities include management... Read More →
avatar for Sarah Brechner

Sarah Brechner

Senior Product Manager, ProQuest
I'm a librarian with a background in social sciences and literature. I've worked at ProQuest since 1996. Prior to that, I worked in a variety of libraries, which was very interesting and challenging, but eventually, I wanted to help create the information resources we used at the... Read More →
avatar for Carmelita Pickett

Carmelita Pickett

Associate University Librarian, University of Iowa
Carmelita Pickett is the Associate University Librarian for Collections & Scholarly Communications at the University of Iowa Librries. She is responsible for providing leadership and oversight for the development and management of the University Libraries’ collections. She has... Read More →
MR

Missy Roser

Head of Research & Instruction, Amherst College Library


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Laurens Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Outsourced and Overwhelmed: Gaining a Grasp on Managing Electronic Resources
Outsourcing the management of electronic journals has significantly reduced the autonomy academic libraries have over their collection’s metadata, as well as the ways in which that data is summarized and made available to the library, yet the ephemerality of serials data makes quality-control burdensome and costly on the corporate end and necessitates ongoing title-tracking and database maintenance on the library’s end. As a result, the quality of data in outsourced knowledgebases is often inversely proportional to the library’s tolerance of “bad data,” as well as our inability to tell the difference. This session demonstrates how an MS Access database was constructed that integrates data from various sources in order to reconcile title lists from varied sources, process yearly subscription changes, and manage the distribution of work to departmental staff. As such, it both serves as a reconciliation tool with administrative functions for linking and displaying summary data about subscribed e-journal packages, and it provides a workflow tool with a user interface designed for staff to easily manage ongoing subscription maintenance. Serials are dynamic by nature, and a management system should have the ability to track and respond to these changes. This easily-maintained tool offers a model for managing change across the interrelated applications that manage subscriptions to online serials.

Speakers
MH

Matthew Harrington

Data Projects and Partnerships, NC State University
Matthew Harrington currently works on database projects and financial reconciliation in the Acquisitions and Discovery Department at NC State University's James B. Hunt Jr. Library.  Since returning to libraries from an academic career in 2009, he has designed, constructed and presented... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Playing 'Moneyball' in Librarianship: The Winning Strategy of Gap Analysis
Anyone familiar with the book or movie, “Moneyball,” also knows the term, “sabermetrics.” When the Oakland A’s started to assemble its Major League Baseball team for the 2002 season, it was facing limited revenues and the departure of three marquee players. Billy Beane, the team’s general manager, and his staff adopted an analytical, evidence-based approach to assembling a competitive team. They filled the gaps in their line-up based on careful research, not just gut feelings. Many librarians find themselves in a situation not unlike the one Beane faced in early 2002. But if librarians think in a new way – move toward data-driven acquisition like Billy Beane – they just might be able to provide greater access to the foundational and interdisciplinary content library patrons want, and elevate their own stature within an institution. The objective of this session is to show librarians how they can use various types of data to make strategic acquisition decisions. To make the session interactive, we would show sample data and give participants the opportunity to discuss acquisition options based on the data and budgets, and how information like this would be useful in their own institutions. Participants will learn how data can drive high-quality decisions and be a powerful vehicle for change. The format would be a moderated panel of librarians.

Speakers
avatar for Becky Pease

Becky Pease

Sr. Regional Marketing, Elsevier


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Rutledge Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Shotgun Session
1. Space Planning: Calculating Collection Footprints
Shawn Tonner

Downsizing or moving collections off-site, particularly portions of the print journal collections, is a frequent topic of discussion in academic libraries. How do you determine the space required or gained when journals or other collections are relocated or de-accessioned?   The purpose of this session is to present a process for measuring and calculating the linear and square foot dimensions of your collection.  The presenter will discuss planning steps, labor requirements, and how to get to the bottom line for your next measurement project. It is not rocket science, just a practical approach to a common problem. 

2. Giving Subject Specialists the Tools They Need To Succeed: The Collection Development Training Manual at the University of Maryland 
Maggie Saponaro

The University of Maryland Libraries (UMD) has over 40 librarians with collection development responsibilities. These subject specialists represent a range of varying experience levels with collection development – from new librarians to seasoned veterans. Although many subject specialists are required to use the same tools for their collection development activities, materials to support these activities were not always easy to find, nor was there one place to direct new subject specialists who needed resources to assist them with their responsibilities. Attendees will learn the process undertaken to develop of a toolkit for materials for subject specialists, including the key issues identified by subject specialists and members of the Library Acquisitions unit, the framework developed for the toolkit, and the implementation process for the toolkit.  

3. Picture This:  Using Instagram to Promote Your Library
Laura Crain 

As a way to reach students where they are, Saint Michael’s College Library entered the social media world by launching an Instagram account in February 2014.  Instagram is a popular social media app used for sharing photos and videos.  Instagram allows students to connect with the library in a fun, informal and visual way.  Pew Research reports that 53% of college-aged adults use Instagram.  We estimate that half of Saint Michael’s College students, about 1000 students, are Instagram users.  This presentation will cover the art of captioning, popular and unpopular posts, hashtags, social media themes, promoting scholarship, reposting, and analytics.

4. EPUB 3: What you need to know
Joshua Tallent 

The EPUB format is constantly changing and adapting, and it can be hard to keep up with those changes. This shotgun session will give you all the information you need to know about the EPUB format, including what it can do, differences between EPUB 2 and EPUB 3, what features are actually supported in reading systems, and new or upcoming features like EDUPUB.   

Speakers
avatar for Laura Crain

Laura Crain

Library Director, Saint Michael's College
avatar for Maggie Saponaro

Maggie Saponaro

Head of Collection Development, University of Maryland, College Park
Directs the collection development work of the University of Maryland Libraries’ subject specialist liaison librarians, with primary responsibility for content and budgeting of the UMD Libraries' general collections. Serves on the Collection Strategies and Services (CSS) administrative... Read More →
avatar for Joshua Tallent

Joshua Tallent

Director of Sales and Education, Firebrand Technologies
Joshua Tallent is an acclaimed teacher and guide on the role of data in publishing, and a vocal advocate for high quality book metadata. He serves as the Director of Sales and Education at Firebrand Technologies (www.firebrandtech.com), where his focus is on helping publishers of all sizes learn about, and find solutions to, their workflow and metadata problems. Joshua can often be found researching odd metadata issues, creating training videos and documentation about Firebrand services, and speaking at conferences... Read More →
avatar for Shawn Tonner

Shawn Tonner

Interim Associate Dean, Florida International University
Shawn Tonner is currently involved in a large observational study of student use of the university library facilities, program planning for the exhibition of Shakespeare’s First Folio at FIU’s Frost Art Museum in February 2016, and a variety of statistical studies.  In addition... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

Stop Looking Over My Shoulders - A Consensus Framework for Patron Privacy
As content moves into digital systems and increasingly onto the cloud, we need to recognize that those systems are constantly tracking reader behavior and interactions with that content. That does not mean, however, that we should be checking patron's privacy at the door. In 2015, NISO launched an initiative to develop a consensus framework for patron privacy in libraries, publishers and information systems. Building on decades of advocacy in the library community, the NISO project aims to take a practical approach to how publishers, libraries and vendors can balance the expectations of privacy and the value that can be derived from applying usage information to improving services. A series of discussions culminated in an in-person meeting in San Francisco during which a draft framework was agreed. This talk will outline that resulting framework and encourage its adoption within the community.

Speakers
avatar for Todd Carpenter

Todd Carpenter

Executive Director, NISO
Wine, food, wine, Standards, running, wine, food, wine.http://orcid.org/0000-0002-8320-0491
avatar for Nettie Lagace

Nettie Lagace

Associate Executive Director, NISO
Nettie Lagace is the Associate Executive Director at NISO, where she is responsible for facilitating the work of NISO's topic committees and development groups for standards and best practices, and working with the community to encourage broad adoption of this consensus work. Prior... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

11:35am EST

The Once and Future Publishing Library
The recently published The Once and Future Publishing Library (Okerson & Holzman 2015)* tracks the development of library publishing from the 1990s to the present. With the formation and continuing growth of the Library Publishing Coalition, now open to international as well as North American membership, plus the unification--at minimum through reporting lines--of about twenty percent of American university presses with their institution’s library, it seems a good time to evaluate where we are and, perhaps more importantly, where library publishing might be going. Using the report as a starting point, panelists will consider such questions as the large and small goals of library publishing initiatives, the types of materials libraries are best at and perhaps not as good at publishing, creating sustainable business models, peer review, disseminating and marketing library materials, and curation. Panelists will include librarians active in publishing activities, university and/or commercial publishers, and disseminators of scholarly content (eg., Project Muse, JStor, EBSCO). Perhaps a practicing scholar as well to comment on what a scholar would expect a library publisher to provide among its services. The tentative format would be for the session chair to pose questions for each of the panelists to address.

*--to be published by CLIR summer 2015

Moderators
avatar for Alex Holzman

Alex Holzman

Scholarly Communications Consultant, Alex Publishing Solutions
Alex Holzman retired as Temple University Press director in 2014 and now heads Alex Publishing Solutions, a scholarly communications consultant.  He has, during a forty-year career, been involved in scholarship as press director, editor, electronic publishing coordinator, author... Read More →

Speakers
avatar for Maria Bonn

Maria Bonn

Associate Professor, MS/LIS and CAS Program Director, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign
Maria Bonn is an Associate Professor and Director of the MS in Library and Information Science program in the School of Information Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign. Her research and teaching focuses on academic librarianship and the role of libraries in scholarly... Read More →
avatar for Amy Brand

Amy Brand

Director, The MIT Press
Amy Brand, PhD, is director of the MIT Press and co-founder of the MIT Knowledge Futures Group, which develops open knowledge infrastructure. She has played a seminal role in transformative scholarly communications initiatives such as ORCiD, CRediT, and Peer Review Transparency. Previously... Read More →
avatar for Charles Watkinson

Charles Watkinson

Director, University of Michigan Press, University of Michigan
I'm AUL for Publishing at University of Michigan Library and Director of University of Michigan Press. I'm particularly interested in next-gen institutional repositories, the future of ebook collections and acquisitions, and how books can also get to participate in the networked digital... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

11:35am EST

What Goes Around, Comes Around: Calibrating the Academic Research Life Cyle to the Open Access Life Cycle
This presentation will outline the key components of the academic research life cycle and how libraries can align their services to best serve academic authors. By walking through each component of the academic research life cycle, we will outline the services libraries currently have available or can develop to best coordinate with the activities undertaken by the research community. This talk will also explore the development work occurring above the campus level to indicate the most useful standards and services available beyond the campus environment. In addition, the presenters will also explore the need to develop further life cycles for researcher management offices and publishers as well. Attendees at this session will gain an in-depth understanding of the current components of both the US & UK research life cycle, what services libraries can be offering, as well as the services available beyond the campus. In addition, the life cycle will depict where current public policies and funder mandates are applicable within the research process.

Speakers
avatar for Jill Emery

Jill Emery

Collection Development & Management Librarian, Portland State University
I am the Collection Development Librarian at Portland State University Library and have over 20 years of academic library experience. I have held leadership positions in ALA ALCTS, ER&L, and NASIG. In 2015, I served as the ALA-NISO representative to vote on NISO/ISO standards on behalf... Read More →
avatar for Graham Stone

Graham Stone

Information Resources Manager, University of Huddersfield
Graham is Information Resources Manager at the University of Huddersfield UK where he manages the library’s information resources budget, including acquisitions, subscriptions and APC payments. He also manages the University Repository and University Press. Graham has been involved... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 11:35am - 12:15pm EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

12:30pm EST

When You Come to a Fork in the Road, Take It (15th Annual Health Sciences Lively Lunch)
Limited Capacity seats available

Sponsored Luncheon - RSVP Required

In this year's sponsored, but no holds barred lunch, participants will have the opportunity to contemplate examples of proactive approaches answering the question posed by the 2015 conference theme, “Where Do We Go From Here?”.  After greetings from the lunch host, Rittenhouse, and the traditional brief “year in review” recap by Ramune Kubilius, three panelists will share insights and open the floor for lively discussion with session participants.

Researchers increasingly must meet various data management requirements and mandates, while educators are challenged by changing trends in providing curricular content. Where does that leave libraries? In the best case scenarios, they utilize approaches espoused in Yogi Berra’s advice—they follow paths (opportunities) that present themselves, and become partners.

Cunera Buys will describe work she and Pamela Shaw (Biosciences & Bioinformatics Librarian, Northwestern University’s Galter Health Sciences Library) have done in the data management planning arena, as part of a university working group. She will touch on differing disciplinary needs and how data management affects scholarly publishing and communication activities.

Are alternate open textbooks a solution for educators seeking health sciences curricular reading materials? Elizabeth Lorbeer will discuss the current environment, experiments, and roles (“reinvented” expertise) librarians can share in order to help faculty and students. 

Finally, before moving to longer lively discussion, moderator Jean Gudenas will round out the panel by sharing examples of recent developments and experiments, how libraries have strived to demonstrate value in the collections and document delivery arena.

Moderators
avatar for Jean Gudenas

Jean Gudenas

Head of Collections Management, Loyola University Chicago Health Sciences Library
For the past five years, Jean Gudenas has been the Head of Collections Management for Loyola University Health Sciences Library in Maywood, Illinois. In that time, she has facilitated the transition of a largely print-based collection to a nearly all-electronic collection. Her current... Read More →

Speakers
CM

Cunera M. Buys

E-Science Librarian, Northwestern University Library
Cunera is the E-science librarian at Northwestern University Libraries. As the E-science Librarian, she keeps abreast on issues involving Federal Funder requirements for data sharing and data management issues. She also conducts data management workshops for faculty, graduate students... Read More →
RK

Ramune Kubilius

Collection Development / Special Projects Librarian, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Galter Library
avatar for Liz Lorbeer

Liz Lorbeer

Library Director, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker M.D. School of Medicine
Liz is the library director at Western Michigan University School of Medicine, a newer medical school in the U.S. to be granted full accreditation from the Liaison Committee of Medical Education. I am interested in all things library and learning new ways to disseminate content using... Read More →




Friday November 6, 2015 12:30pm - 2:00pm EST
Vincent Chicco's

12:45pm EST

Accelerating Adoption of Green Open Access
Adoption by scholars of their rights to put a version of their articles into repository so that anyone can access it is very low. Even in places where there are mandates or policies requiring or strongly encouraging Open Access the policies and mandates are only forward looking, so many important articles are not archived. In places or disciplines where there are no mandates form funding organizations or where there are no institutional policies strongly encouraging open access the adoption rates are extremely low. What can be done to have the vast majority of scholarly articles freely available to learners and scholars world-wide?
A proposal has been made that publishers, especially open access publishers, could ping authors of referenced sources to encourage them self-archive a version of their articles.
This lively lunch will be to discuss the pro's and con's of this approach and identify what are some of the tools in place or under development which could automate the processes of any organization seeking to urge scholars to self-archive.

Speakers
avatar for John G. Dove

John G. Dove

Consultant and Open Access Advocate, Alzora
I’m the former CEO of Credo Reference, and before that president of Silverplatter. I am now a consultant to the publishing and library worlds specifically in areas related to Open Access. I won't take on any clients that aren't working to accelerate the transition to a fully... Read More →
avatar for Sebastian Hammer

Sebastian Hammer

President and co-Founder, Index Data
Co-founder of Index Data. Passionate about interoperable systems and collaborative software projects. I have worked with library technology for the better part of three decades.


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Creating the Sandbox: The Juxtaposition of Collections and Student Development
Universities and their libraries play an important social acculturation role by helping to educate and support the intellectual, emotional and even moral growth of young adults as they prepare to enter the working world and to define themselves as individuals and contributing members of society. This presentation will explore the role(s) that academic library collections play in relation to the psychosocial development of young adults. Drawing upon contemporary learning and young adult development theory, we will situate the role of academic library collections in relation to the various developmental stages, tasks and learning challenges that young adults experience during a typical university experience. While academic library collections are typically built and assessed in response to curricular needs and accreditation processes, they can also be intentionally developed and promoted with more conscious attention to the developmental needs and context of the students who will use them. Audience input will be sought to explore how traditional ways of selecting, promoting, and providing access to library collections can be modified to create more direct and meaningful engagement for our students as they seek to define themselves and make the transition to adulthood.
Learning outcomes will include:
• Understanding of university-aged student psychosocial development stages
• Understanding of the role of library collections in relation to student development needs
• How collections practices can be designed to maximize support for student development needs

Speakers
LG

Linda Graburn

Information Resources Librarian, University of Guelph
avatar for Helen Salmon

Helen Salmon

Collections Librarian (Humanities), University of Guelph Library
Helen Salmon is a Collections Librarian at the University of Guelph Library, with selection responsibilities for the Humanities and Media Resources. She holds an M.A. and an M.L.S. degree, both from the University of Western Ontario. Helen has worked as an academic librarian for the... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Laurens Room, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Elsevier's Heirs, or, Yes, Copyright IS Confusing
Even when we understand the stakes, many of us still find publication agreements and copyright in general to be a mystery. While Elsevier’s new article-sharing policy represents the latest high-profile attempt to change the ecosystem for scholarly sharing, agreements from many publishers impact open access and library practice. Is Creative Commons the simple answer it seems to be? Or do the CC licenses add their own layers of complexity ? This session will introduce the most commonly-encountered stumbling blocks and latest trends, as well as offering a hands-on look at real contracts that need some fixing up.

Join us for a conversation about publishing, copyright, and open access grounded . How are your colleagues reacting to changes in practice? What can librarians do to educate scholars - including librarians publishing our own work and supporting library publishing - about these issues? Who has the time to keep up with all this stuff?

Led by an attorney at a large STEM-based institution. a scholarly communication librarian at a smaller private university, and an open access researcher / activist at an ARL institution, discussion will both challenge the audience and follow audience interest to address questions and share experiences. Whether you’re publishing your own work, supporting someone who is, or just want to know what all those weird Latin phrases mean, this lunch promises to be a great chance to learn more about the environment so you can chart your own course.

Speakers
avatar for Will Cross

Will Cross

Director, Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy, North Carolina State University
Will Cross is the Director of the Open Knowledge Center & Head of Information Policy at N.C. State University where he guides policy, speaks, and writes on copyright literacy and open knowledge. He recently served as a Hewlett-funded Open Education Fellow and as an instructor for... Read More →
avatar for Molly Keener

Molly Keener

Director of Digital Initiatives & ScholComm, Wake Forest University
Molly Keener is Director of Digital Initiatives & Scholarly Communication at the Z. Smith Reynolds Library at Wake Forest University. Her department supports broad engagement among faculty and students in digital scholarship. Keener consults on copyright and author rights management... Read More →
avatar for Heather Morrison

Heather Morrison

Associate Professor, University of Ottawa
The knowledge commons: a collective sharing of all of humankind's knowledge that places the public good and the needs of scholarship at the centre. The knowledge commons is free of charge for anyone to read (open access), except where there are other public good imperatives such as... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Citadel Green Room, Embassy Suites

12:45pm EST

How Do We Report and Manage eBooks in Academic Libraries?
Many libraries include eBooks in their catalog and book holdings, and report those holdings on “about the library” pages and to reporting agencies such as ACRL. Is it reasonable to report eBooks in the same way as physical holdings that libraries own and librarians can point to on a shelf? Yes, because users have access to them? Or no, because that access may be ephemeral (we are thinking particularly of large leased collections or PDA/DDA collection). Does reporting eBook collections artificially inflate library holdings? Should we differentiate “owned” eBooks, “leased” eBook collections and print books on holdings reports?

Publishers can add or withdraw titles from collections without notice, with no input from individual library subject selectors. What does that mean in term of permanent access and relevance to college curricula? What about uniqueness of library collections? How can vendors assist librarians in their selection and ordering process to reduce duplicate purchasing of content already owned or available via subscriptions or PDA/DDA. What about eBooks available to patrons via a consortium arrangement? How do we “weed” eBooks?

Finally, how students view the book chapters online? Do they treat these as journals or are they aware that these are coming from books.

We will share ideas from a librarian and vendor perspectives – but what are your thoughts? How do you handle and report eBooks and eBook records?

Speakers
SK

Sulekha Kalyan

Head of Acquisitions / Associate Professor, Seton Hall University
avatar for Lisa Rose-Wiles

Lisa Rose-Wiles

Science Librarian/Associate Professor, Seton Hall University Libraries
Lisa Rose-Wiles is the Science Librarian at Seton Hall University Libraries in South Orange, New Jersey.  She holds an MLS from Rutgers University and a PhD in Biological Anthropology from Washington University in St. Louis. Prior to moving into the library field, Lisa conducted... Read More →
avatar for Steve Sutton

Steve Sutton

Regional Sales Manager/New York, Subscription Services Division & GOBI Library Solutions, EBSCO Information Services
Steve has over thirty years’ experience working with academic libraries helping to create cost effective strategies for selecting, ordering, receiving, and cataloging print and digital content. He has worked closely with collection development staff in over one hundred libraries... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

12:45pm EST

How to Tweak - Or Maybe Completely Overhaul - an Approval Plan
Franklin & Marshall College is a small undergraduate institution with a FTE of approximately 2,400 students. The library has been using a university press (mostly) approval plan with YBP since the 1990s and the time has come to reconsider the parameters of the current plan. Two subject-specific plans are working well but the larger plan is bringing in titles that are out of scope for the college’s curriculum.

Using the Franklin & Marshall College example, this presentation will discuss the approval plan revision process. Various methods will be highlighted, as well as local and vendor-supplied resources to facilitate designing the best plan for your library.


Some Items that will be discussed:

Current concerns

Possible solutions

The process

Speakers
avatar for Patricia Adams

Patricia Adams

Sr Collection Development Manager, YBP Library Services
Former academic acquisitions and serials librarian currently specializing in monographic acquisitions and collection development, including print and ebook approval plans, demand-driven acquisitions, workflow support and simplification.
TK

Thomas Karel

Collection Management Librarian, Franklin & Marshall College
I have been an academic librarian for 42 years, working in reference, government documents, and collection development. Since 1995 I have also been an adjunct faculty member in Drexel University's library and information science program.


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

12:45pm EST

If Students Were Cats: Understanding the Different Breeds at Your Institution
Trying to increase awareness and utilization of your resources and services? A recent survey done by Cengage Learning said that 75% of college students say they wish they took more advantage of the library and its resources; yet, 70% of them do not ask their campus librarians for help with course assignments. This lively lunch will feature a User Experience Specialist demonstrating how to use thumbnail personas and Agile story mapping techniques. These methods are a quick and easy way to help ensure library programs and services hit the mark with students, faculty, and stakeholders alike. Librarians will be coached in how to build personas that can be used to better understand their faculty and students’ individual needs and gain the knowledge to map out different student types and more easily create targeted “library playbooks” that cover various groups of student learning styles. The tools will also assist in prioritization of the many different student types and faculty groups with whom librarians engage. Coming out of this lively lunch, librarians will have the basic information they need to begin to build personas that can be implemented in marketing the library, making improvements to their web site, and building out internal materials to train staff, all in an effort to maximize the library’s resources and services in a thoughtful and strategic manner.

Speakers
avatar for Carrie Moran

Carrie Moran

User Engagement Librarian, University of Central Florida
avatar for Kyle Stewart

Kyle Stewart

Sr. User Experience Researcher, Gale Cengage Learning
My path into UX started with Anthropology and Journalism, where my love of interviewing people turned into a career. I have a Master in IT Management, focusing quantitative data analysis and management. I try to merge the qualitative research with quantitative data to get a better... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

12:45pm EST

Libraries as a core part of teaching and learning – dream or reality?
Every academic year, instructors in universities and colleges around the world create resource lists for their courses. Their students are often expected to use and source additional resources beyond such lists, for example by using discovery tools. Librarians, who have the expertise to provide support for these tasks, are however often not involved and these activities are therefore rather disintegrated and inefficient.

This session takes a closer look at the role of the library in teaching and learning within both virtual and physical environments. Synergies between students’ and instructors’ tasks and the services which the library can provide for them, such as discovery and acquisition of resources, will be explored. We will also share ideas for cross functional and automated workflows to streamline the different tasks and discuss how we can provide tools for engaging resource lists that do not only provide the students with pre-selected items for a course, but also encourage the use of additional library assets and support a process of discovery, collaboration and knowledge creation. We aim for a lively discussion and contributions from the audience throughout the presentations.

Speakers
avatar for Carl Grant

Carl Grant

Interim Dean of Libraries, Oklahoma University
Dean (Interim) of The University of Oklahoma Libraries, a facility that has been undergoing a rapid transformation for the last five years. Here is a link to our latest annual report that shows the scope of work being done here: https://issuu.com/oulibraries/docs/ou_libraries_pro... Read More →
avatar for Christine Stohn

Christine Stohn

Dir Product Management, ProQuest (Ex Libris)
Christine Stohn is director of product management for discovery and delivery at Ex Libris. Christine has over 25 years of experience in the library and information industry, having worked on the content and data side before joining Ex Libris in 2001. In her current role Christine... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Rutledge Room, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Libraries in a Bind: Practical Solutions and Human Responses to a Weeding Mandate
Many university libraries are currently engaged in major weeding projects as they reduce their print book collections to make room for new space configurations to accommodate emerging library trends such as makerspaces and transitioning toward a predominately e-book collection. To address such a deselection project effectively requires both practical solutions and tact in dealing with faculty who seriously value their collection of print books. Librarians from two universities will share practical approaches to managing a large weeding project and for dealing diplomatically with book users affected. Representatives for deselection project services will also offer insights into their logistic support for handling the weeding project. Ample time will be provided for discussion where collection librarians can candidly discuss both the practical problems and user concerns faced when sandwiched between the demands of a major weeding project and the needs of faculty and students in book-reliant disciplines.

Speakers
avatar for William B. Meyer, Inc.

William B. Meyer, Inc.

Library Relocation Specialist, William B. Meyer
Premiere archival relocation and handling specialists who offer state-of-the-art depository level storage. For libraries and institutions looking for a high-quality, affordable storage service for their valuable volumes and other materials, our facility offers significant storage... Read More →
KM

Kathy Marks

Strategic Sales Director-Libraries, Better World Books
CM

Christina Mayberry

Collection Development Coordinator, Oviatt Library of California State University-Northridge
avatar for Alex McAllister

Alex McAllister

Humanities Librarian, Appalachian State University
avatar for Allan Scherlan

Allan Scherlan

Social Sciences Librarian, Appalachian State University
Allan Scherlen is the collections management librarian for the social sciences at Appalachian State University, Boone, NC. Allan has published articles on various issues related to collection management, publishing, open access, and international librarianship in Collection Development... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Managing, Marketing, and Measuring Open Resources
Librarians from the University of Florida will lead a discussion on the many opportunities and challenges that academic libraries face in managing, marketing, and measuring open resources. Open resources includes traditional open access journals and books, as well as media and curricular materials often referred to as Open Educational Resources (OERs). There are many questions that come up when incorporating open resources into an academic library collection. How do libraries review, select, and organize quality open access resources for inclusion in the collection? What tools and practices are used to manage electronic access? How can libraries better market open resources to faculty? How can libraries assess usage and the impact open resources have on instruction and research? This session is intended to serve as a forum to sharing ideas and best practices around practical solutions to these questions. Audience participation is highly encouraged. Discussion prompts will be presented via a slideshow. Attendees can expect to learn about some of the issues surrounding open resources, how libraries of different sizes have approached these challenges, and what solutions have been found (or not!).

Speakers
SC

Steve Carrico

Acquisitions Librarian, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida
AL

Ann Lindell

Head, Architecture & Fine Arts Library, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida
avatar for Trey Shelton

Trey Shelton

E-Resources Librarian, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida
I am the E-Resources & Acqusitions Librarian at the George A. Smathers Libraries at the University of Florida. I have been with the Smathers Libraries since 2010, and in my current role since 2012. I received my MLS from the University of South Florida in 2009. My primary research... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

One Size Does NOT Fit All: Assessing and Choosing Acquisition Models for Streaming Video
Perpetual rights or annual subscription? Whole collection or single titles? PDA or EBA?

Librarians are facing changes in the streaming video environment from three directions—along with increased demand and growth in the amount available content, there are more and more acquisition models. How does a library think through all the models and make a decision?

The librarian’s view: There are a number of factors you consider when looking at the choices. What’s your collection development vision? What acquisition model works with your budget? Is perpetual access important to you, or can your environment make an adjustment when rights are inevitably lost so that a film is pulled from a subscription? Are your academic programs stable, or do your needs change often? The various acquisition models address these and other criteria differently, and no one model serves all needs.

The vendor’s view: What the vendor offers will reflect the outcome of complex negotiations with the rights holder, or information provider (IP). For example, one IP might agree to include its content in collections but not in PDA. Another might agree to subscriptions but not to perpetual acquisitions.

Please join us to hear academic librarians from Cornell, University of Central Florida, and Arizona State University explain how they’re sorting through the choices, experimenting, evaluating results, and making decisions—following a short introduction by Alexander Street. Our aim is for you to leave with a clear roadmap, so that you can tailor a fit that’s just right for your library.

Speakers
avatar for deg farrelly

deg farrelly

Media Librarian, Arizona State University Libraries
With 40 years experience as a media librarian deg farrelly provides a unique perspective on video in academic libraries. He is the author of “Streaming Video” in the book Rethinking Collection Development and Management, (published by ABC-Clio) and co-investigator in the 2013... Read More →
avatar for Jesse Koennecke

Jesse Koennecke

Director, Acquisitions & E-Resource Licensing, Cornell University
Jesse is responsible for managing Acquisitions and E-Resource Licensing services for Cornell University Library (CUL). Jesse has been involved with the Future of Libraries Is Open project to develop open source software for libraries since 2016  Ask me about Battledecks@ER&L!Ask... Read More →
avatar for Eileen Lawrence

Eileen Lawrence

Senior Vice President, Alexander Street
I'm passionate about food (vegan), music (opera), theatre (put me in New York), friends (are family), and work (a happy addict). Passionate about new Alexander Street projects -- food studies; 20th-century Islam; disabilities; social work; borders and migration; classical scores (1.3... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Cooper Room, Courtyard Marriott

12:45pm EST

Open Perspectives on Open Access: Realities of Commercial Publishing
Librarians are responsible for providing access to information; commercial publishers are responsible for providing information to access. How does this dichotomy succeed in the reality of open access? What issues cause this dichotomy, and how can cooperative success be achieved?
This Lively Lunch presents issues for discussion to further necessary cooperation among librarians and commercial publishers. Open Perspectives for discussion:
Why is open access necessary for commercially-published serials?
 Relationship to institutional repositories
 Predatory open access journals
Does open access negatively affect the quality of scholarly content?
 “Information wants to be free”: The necessity of peer-review, editors, editorial boards
 Tenure and promotion pertaining to publication requirements
 Author rights in concert with open access and commercial publishing
Collection development budgets versus commercial publisher revenue
 Open access and cost savings for libraries
 Impact of open access commercial publishing on revenue and productivity
 The reality of monopolistic practices and predatory pricing
What are the true impacts of open access mandates, gold versus green options, and APC requirements on libraries and commercial publishers?
Facilitator: Dr. Gary Pitkin, former library dean, editor of three commercially-published journals, author, consultant. Panelists: Dr. Marta Deyrup, Professor Seton Hall University, LITA acquisitions editor, editorial board member/peer-reviewer, author, consultant; George Machovec, Executive Director Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries, editorial board member, author, consultant; Stacy Sieck, Library Communications Manager for the Americas, Taylor and Francis; Tony Roche, Publishing Director, Emerald Group Publishing.

Speakers
avatar for Marta Deyrup

Marta Deyrup

Librarian and Professor, Seton Hall University
Marta Deyrup is Professor and Head of Technical Services at Seton Hall University Libraries in South Orange, New Jersey. She holds a MLS from Rutgers University and a PhD from the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Columbia University.
avatar for George Machovec

George Machovec

Executive Director, Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries
I am the executive director of the Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries. My expertise revolves around library consortia, shared print programs, union catalogs and e-resource licensing. I am the managing editor of The Charleston Advisor/ccAdvisor.
GP

Gary Pitkin

Editor/consultant, GMP Associates


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

12:45pm EST

Playing with Fire – Why Publishers Leave the Big Deal

While librarians always had an ambiguous relationship with the big deal, publishers have been very satisfied with its economic outcomes. The move to database-deals, encompassing ejournals, ebooks, and databases, pushes the boundaries even further – offering libraries unprecedented discounts while locking them in into high volume, multi-year deals.

What has been overlooked though is the impact the big deal had on the relationship between major publishers offering distribution services to smaller publishers and even more so to learned societies.

The presentation describes the effect for libraries, societies, and publishers, particularly their ability to make economically sensible decisions in the context of the big deal versus an independent distribution and services organization.   


Speakers
avatar for Sven Fund

Sven Fund

Managing Director, FullStopp Society for Digitality


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

12:45pm EST

Print & E-Books Use in Tandem – Dialogue on the Implications for Library Collections and Publisher Programs
Print and e-books share the same ecosphere and therefore not only compete to meet readers’ needs but also complement one another. Moreover, the interactions between the two formats have profoundly differential impacts on print circulation and e-books usage as well as affect how all monographs are used. What librarians and publishers are learning about the influence of e-books on their print counterparts in particular has major implications for building collections and publishing monographs.

Drawing from their respective experiences at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Libraries and Oxford University Press (including their multi-year participation in the Triangle Research Libraries Network program for wholesale acquisition/vending of both print and e-books), this dialogue between a librarian and publisher highlights how the two organizations are adjusting to this new book world. In particular the speakers will discuss how changes in library collection strategies are affecting the vending of monographs in tandem with how evolving publishing models are influencing library acquisitions.

Speakers
avatar for Rebecca Seger

Rebecca Seger

Vice President, Institutional Participation and Strategic Partnerships, ITHAKA
LS

Luke Swindler

Collections Management Officer, University of North Carolina
Luke Swindler has been working in collections for over three decades. In his current position he has a leading role in analyzing, planning, and managing library collections generally and spearheading e-books initiatives specifically for the University Library, University of North... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Road Mapping: Managing Changes in Collection Management
As we transition more of our collections to electronic formats, the staffing levels and job in Collection Management departments are changing. Less print journals mean less need for a staff person to checkin, file and claim issues. Less funds for print books and more electronic book purchases or subscriptions to large packages, means less staff people to handle order requests, process received books and facilitate payments. What about the staff member whose job assignment has eroded or who’s physical ability to perform key parts of their job assignments have diminished over the years? Meanwhile the responsibilities of the department head continues to expand—institutional repositories, databases, interlibrary loan, etc,. In this session, participants will be invited to share their experiences with change management in their departments.

Speakers
avatar for Glenda Alvin

Glenda Alvin

Interim Director of Libraries and Media Centers, Tennessee State University
avatar for Jack Montgomery

Jack Montgomery

Professor, Coordinator, Acquisitions and Collection Services, Western Kentucky University Libraries



Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Embassy Suites

12:45pm EST

STEAMpunks: How Makerspaces Bring Science to Life
The greatest handicap that education in science, mathematics, and engineering faces today isn’t the difficulty of the subjects or even the unequal access to appropriate learning resources: it is lack of engagement. Too many students see science and math as irrelevant to their daily experience, and can only relate to them as passive consumers of technology.

The revolutionary rise of Makerspaces in libraries promises to change that. 3D printers, programmable lathes, and modular electronics make it easy even for the inexperienced to turn creative inspirations into useful, beautiful inventions they can share with others. For educators, the Makerspaces offer unique hands-on opportunities to show how knowledge of science and math can enrich students’ lives and to break down unnecessary barriers that isolate artistic imaginations from technical interests and skills (and vice versa).

John Rennie, editorial director of McGraw-Hill Education’s AccessScience, will lead this panel of Makerspace innovators and leading librarians as they discuss how best to encourage curiosity-driven STEAM learning for lifelong benefits.

Speakers
avatar for John Burke

John Burke

Library Director, Miami University Middletown
John J. Burke is the author of the Neal-Schuman Library Technology Companion (ALA, 2019) and Makerspaces: A Practical Guide for Librarians (Rowman & Littlefield, 2018). His scholarship centers on makerspaces, LMS embedded librarianship, and technology for library staff. John is the... Read More →
avatar for Sharona Ginsberg

Sharona Ginsberg

Learning Technologies Librarian, SUNY Oswego
Sharona Ginsberg is the founder and coordinator of MakerBridge, an online community for all makers but especially focused on librarians and educators. Currently, she is employed as Learning Technologies Librarian at SUNY Oswego. She is a 2015 Library Journal Mover & Shaker and has a master’s degree in library science from the University of... Read More →
avatar for John Rennie

John Rennie

Editorial Director, AccessScience, McGraw-Hill Education
John Rennie is a science writer, editor, and lecturer based in New York. Viewers of The Weather Channel know him as the host of the original series Hacking The Planet and co-host of the hit special The Truth About Twisters. He is also the editorial director of science for McGraw-Hill... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

12:45pm EST

The Charlotte Initiative on eBook Principles: A Mellon Funded Project -- Q&A Session for Publishers, Aggregators and Librarians

Principal Investigator Chuck Hamaker and the UNC Charlotte based project team have assembled a Working Group of twenty participants representing library consortia, publishers, content aggregators, and academic libraries.  In this session I’ll give an overview of the project and describe the scope of the publisher and vendor environmental scan.  Please come with your questions and ideas.

As a Mellon supported project, our focus is the humanities and humanistic social sciences.  We will discuss, define and investigate the impact on academic institutions of three principles for eBook licenses:

 

  1. Unlimited simultaneous users
  2. No Digital Rights Management (DRM) either contractual or technological
  3. Irrevocable perpetual access and archival rights

 

We have formed three research teams to explore licensing terms, user experience and the impact of DRM, and classroom and instruction use. The fourth component is an iterative environmental scan of the eBook market, which is a major part of my role as Project Consultant.  We will share information throughout the remaining 18 months of effort. The project will conclude with a free conference in Charlotte in Spring 2017.


Speakers
avatar for October Ivins

October Ivins

Principal and Consultant, Ivins eContent Solutions
October was an academic librarian for 20 years at UNC and LSU, and was an executive at two Boston area publishing services dot coms.  She is an independent consultant to publishers and other content providers, associations, libraries, and consortia.  Projects typically include market... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Magnolia Room, Courtyard Marriott

12:45pm EST

The Future of the Subscription Agent
The Subscription agent for over 50 years has been the backbone of the library serials department. Managing and processing individual subscription orders for often thousands of orders has been achieved using the latest technology. With the transition from print to e-journals, and the rise of the big and custom deals as well as consortia, the agents have lost much of their value to both libraries and publishers. As we move forward how will the agent survive? We have seen the collapse of Swets, the number two agent. What do libraries need now from agents, can agents reinvent themselves, and how are agents going to replace the publisher commissions. The panel of librarians, agents and publisher will address this pressing issue.

Speakers
avatar for Bob Boissy

Bob Boissy

Director, Institutional Marketing and Account Development, Springer Nature
avatar for Jill Emery

Jill Emery

Collection Development & Management Librarian, Portland State University
I am the Collection Development Librarian at Portland State University Library and have over 20 years of academic library experience. I have held leadership positions in ALA ALCTS, ER&L, and NASIG. In 2015, I served as the ALA-NISO representative to vote on NISO/ISO standards on behalf... Read More →
avatar for Tina Feick

Tina Feick

Director Sales and Marketing, North America, HARRASSOWITZ
Tina held serials librarian positions at the Free Library of Philadelphia and Princeton University. After 10 years, she joined Blackwell's Periodicals Division (Oxford, UK) as the first "Serials Specialist". She is presently Director of Sales and Marketing, North America for Harrassowitz... Read More →
avatar for Dan Tonkery

Dan Tonkery

CEO, Content Strategy


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

12:45pm EST

The Importance of Outreach in Shared Print Projects
Shared print projects can often be seen from the library perspective as a win-win proposition. They allow libraries to free up limited space for new uses or growing collections, while ensuring continued access to print content for users. Unfortunately, faculty and other stakeholders sometimes see the removal of materials from libraries very differently.

In this session we will explore concerns often raised by campus constituencies related to shared print projects. We will also present two case studies that examine how a large research university participating in multiple journal-based shared print projects and a mid-sized private university participating in a monograph-based shared print project reached out to their campuses to educate them, gather feedback and develop buy-in.

Persons attending this session will be able to:
• articulate common concerns raised about shared print projects
• describe different approaches to engage campus constituencies and gather feedback related to shared print projects.

Attendees will also have an opportunity to discuss challenges at their local institutions and share how they have successfully engaged faculty and other stakeholders in discussions surrounding the management of legacy collections.

Speakers
avatar for Teri Koch

Teri Koch

Director, Scholarly Collaborations & Communications, Drake University
Teri Koch is a Professor of Librarianship at Drake University. She is also the Collection Development and Scholarly Communications librarian. She oversees the collection, the library liaison program, and she promotes open access and OER initiatives.
avatar for Rick Lugg

Rick Lugg

Executive Director, OCLC Sustainable Collection Services, OCLC
Decision support for print book collections
avatar for Doug Way

Doug Way

Associate University Librarian for Collections and Research Services, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Doug Way is the associate university librarian for collections and research services at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he provides leadership for the library's collection development and management, resource sharing, and scholarly communications programs. Doug has written... Read More →
avatar for Heather Weltin

Heather Weltin

Director of Collection Management & Resource Sharing, University of Wisconsin-Madison



Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

12:45pm EST

Then and Now: Re-visioning a Liaison Program in the Context of Library Restructuring
In 2014, we led a very lively lunchtime discussion called “Managing to the Center: Balancing the Academic Library Seesaw,” in which we talked about the challenges inherent in our library’s current subject specialist/liaison program and proposed some changes for the future. A year has gone by. During that time, our library has embarked on a complete organizational restructuring and, as part of that larger effort, we are beginning a long-anticipated re-visioning of the liaison framework. In this session, we will report on progress, discuss new challenges -- including how the liaison’s role continues to shift from a focus on collection development and management to a greater emphasis on outward-facing engagement -- and share some of the models we are considering for developing, leading, and administering a new liaison program, as well as our efforts to provide relevant training and support. At the start of the session, participants will be invited to share their perspectives about liaison roles and the preparation needed to tackle related responsibilities in an ever-changing library environment. Their comments, coupled with discussion questions, will guide our conversation about attempts to define, promote, and sustain “active liaising.” What struggles do we face? What opportunities are available? What are the potential rewards and outcomes? What does success look like? And how can we adjust to the ever-shifting seesaw?

Speakers
HL

Harriet Lightman

Head, Research & Learning Services, Northwestern University Libraries
Harriet Lightman heads Research & Learning Services at Northwestern University Library, and is the library's long-time liaison for history. She was formerly the Head of Academic Liaison Services, and Head of Research & Information Services at Northwestern, and served as a liaison... Read More →
MR

Marianne Ryan

Associate University Librarian, User Strategies, Northwestern University Libraries


Friday November 6, 2015 12:45pm - 2:00pm EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

50 Shades of eBooks
Institutionally licensed eBooks have not quite lived up to users’ needs and libraries’ expectations. Patrons accustomed to the ease of accessing eBooks purchased via commercial sites such as Amazon and Google Play are sometimes thrown for a loop when they encounter eBooks via the library’s site and the myriad restrictions that seem designed to turn users away. Libraries struggle with managing the complexities of eBook licensing and access, and staying on top of the differences between vendor platforms. Add to that the rapidly changing landscape of the ebook business landscape (rocketing STL prices, conflicting access models for ebooks on the same platform, the list can go on), and it’s a wonder libraries manage to keep up in spite of limited staff and lean budgets. EKU Libraries has developed some coping strategies and some ideas on what needs to be done to make eBooks more user-friendly.
Objective: share EKU Libraries' strategies for managing eBooks and helping patrons effectively utilize institutionally licensed eBooks for their research needs
Audience: Q&A from audience strongly encouraged; audience members encouraged to share their own strategies.

Speakers
avatar for Laura Edwards

Laura Edwards

Associate Director, Discovery and Metadata, Eastern Kentucky University Libraries
Laura Edwards is Associate Director of Discovery and Metadata at Eastern Kentucky University Libraries, where she leads efforts to optimize metadata and discovery in the Libraries’ web presence including library management systems, link resolvers, the EKU Encompass digital repository... Read More →
avatar for Victoria Koger

Victoria Koger

Collection Management Librarian, Eastern Kentucky University Libraries
Victoria is an Associate Librarian in Collection Management and Leader of the Collections and Acquisitions team at Eastern Kentucky University. She earned her MLIS from Florida State University in 1997 and has a background in reference and instruction at academic institutions. Weeding... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

2:25pm EST

Changing Perceptions of a Good Book Price: Comparing the Net Price System of the 1900s to Contemporary e-Book Pricing Debates
This paper explores how the valuation of books as cultural commodities has changed through examination of two historical periods of book pricing and publisher-library relations. The paper compares current e-book pricing debates, and recent shifts in attitudes about e-book pricing, with pricing debates and changes in the conceptualization of book prices from the “net book” pricing period of the early 1900s. The paper introduces readers to the story of the net price system book price control system employed in the 1900s. It describes tensions between stakeholders that led to the net price system, reactions to this new arrangement, and its impact on library book buying practices. The paper then describes similarities between the net price system conflict and current tensions in e-book pricing and purchasing practices. Finally, the paper uses the concept of cultural commodity to explain how, in both periods, changes in pricing led to changes in how libraries evaluate books for purchase and how librarians conceptualize what counts as a good price for a book. Librarians, publishers, and vendors are invited to contribute to the discussions of what makes a good book in terms of price.

Speakers
avatar for Mei Zhang

Mei Zhang

Ph.D. student, School of Library and Information Studies, University of Wisconsin-Madison
I am a Ph.D student majored in Library Science at University of Wisconsin- Madison. My research focuses on electronic resource management and information policy, and my dissertation will explore decision making processes used by libraries for selecting e-book packages, and processes... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Cooper Room, Courtyard Marriott

2:25pm EST

Creating a Standard of Practice for License Alternatives
The aim of our research is to establish a standard of practice for license alternatives, where a gap exists in library literature. Although a new concept, there is enough knowledge of best practices that will apply to alternatives. Much of the life cycle of electronic resources with and without licenses remains the same; therefore, a workflow can be framed for alternatives. Kansas State University created a standard workflow for managing license alternatives in its management systems Verde and Alma. We based this standard on the differences between licenses and their conventional alternatives, the NISO Shared Electronic Resource Understanding, as well as terms of use without registered or signed agreement. Aspects of this presentation will also apply to institutions without electronic resource management (ERM) systems. After considering the acquisition and review practices of license alternatives, a discussion of interlibrary loan as well as enforcing terms in the patron community will be offered. Interlibrary loan staff will easily interpret their procedures of Fair Use based on documentation in the ERM. Audience members will be given an opportunity to interpret terms and apply to a fair use example. Attendees can expect to learn a standard workflow as it applies to license alternatives.

Speakers
avatar for Christina Geuther

Christina Geuther

Electronic Resources Librarian, Kansas State University
I manage electronic resource license records in Alma, negotiate license terms with vendors, and troubleshoot electronic resource access for K-State Libraries.
avatar for Mira  Greene

Mira Greene

Head, Content Development & Acquisitions, Kansas State University


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Citadel Green Room, Embassy Suites

2:25pm EST

Data that Counts
Since the first Code of Practice was published in 2003, the COUNTER (Counting Online Usage of Networked Electronic Resources) standard has facilitated the recording and reporting of online usage statistics in a consistent and comparable way. The standard, now in its fourth iteration, has developed over time in response to the changing e-resource environment and to evolving user requirements. Engagement with relevant initiatives and input from vendors is critical to COUNTER’s ongoing evolution. Amongst these, COUNTER has worked with NISO on SUSHI to develop a protocol to facilitate the automated harvesting and consolidation of usage statistics from different vendors. Both COUNTER and SUSHI form the basis of tools to facilitate the gathering and analysis of usage data and they help support provision of efficient and cost-effective services. One such tool is the Jisc funded JUSP (Journal Usage Statistics Portal), which provides a single point of access to data, enabling libraries to quickly and easily compare usage across a range of publishers and years. Accurate and comparable usage statistics support analysis and evaluation of e-resources and help to demonstrate their value and impact. JUSP is an important tool that aims to support libraries in this context. This session will outline how COUNTER supports development of tools and services with global reach and impact. It will highlight challenges and opportunities that exist with regard to metrics in terms of developing, gathering and analyzing data and service and will offer some shareable models of good practice.

Speakers
avatar for Lorraine  Estelle

Lorraine Estelle

Director, Project COUNTER
Lorraine Estelle began her career in the publishing industry before moving to Jisc in 2002. There she became CEO of Jisc Collections, the UK's academic library consortium. There she also conceived and led a number of research projects including the National e-books observatory project... Read More →
JL

Jo Lambert

Service Manager, JISC
Jo Lambert manages a number of services and projects at Jisc, a UK registered charity that champions the use of digital technologies in education and research. Current work includes managing UK shared analytics services such as the Journal Usage Statistics Portal (JUSP) and Institutional... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Future of Library Collaboration
The future of libraries will focus on our ability to redefine the library as a center for learning, service, access, and collaboration. This presentation will discuss these collaborative efforts in several areas: Progress and investment in turning our physical spaces into collaborative learning environments; advocacy for the role of the library to internal and external partners; providing technology infused access and support services; getting content to students and faculty when and how they need it; and the migration from siloed to networked information. Included in this presentation will be discussion and examples drawn from the library community, as well as examples of how our interactions with the vendor community must change in order to achieve sustainable models in an era of constrained resources. Access and discovery will continue to change; the role of academic libraries will continue to evolve; and technology will flatten fee and access models to the point where new, innovative, and sustainable access models can emerge for those libraries, and those vendors, that are willing to recognize that the status quo must change. Included in this discussion will be the movement from owned to leased access to content, provide examples of innovative demand driven collection development strategies, and inspire libraries to recognize, and leverage, their strengths achieve greater sustainability in serving our constituents.

Speakers
JP

Jason Phillips

Director, Institutional Participation & Strategic Partnerships, ITHAKA (JSTOR/Portico)


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

Google Books: It Ain’t Over ‘til the Librarian Sings.
Did you know that the Google Books litigation isn’t over?  The Second Circuit has yet to be heard from.  What might happen there?  More importantly, what’s the practical upshot of the Google Books Project itself?  Has it been worth it?  Is the world a better place?  Share your thoughts and questions with Bill Hannay, lawyer and inveterate googler.

Speakers
avatar for William M. Hannay

William M. Hannay

Partner, Schiff Hardin LLP
Bill Hannay regularly counsels corporations and individuals with respect to federal and state antitrust law, intellectual property law, and other trade regulation laws. He is an Adjunct Professor, teaching courses at IIT/Chicago-Kent law school in antitrust and international business... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

In the Highways and the Hedges: Library Support for OER Adoption Efforts at Higher Education Institutions Across Virginia.
Presenters will share examples of innovative library approaches to supporting and leading Open Educational Resources (OER) adoption efforts at institutions of higher education across Virginia. Statewide initiatives on OER include a unique blend of administrative and grassroots organizations that work hand in hand to leverage the economic benefits and educational advantages of open educational resources. Attendees can expect to hear about grant-funded OER initiatives currently underway; building a supportive, flexible, cross-institutional librarian training community; the rationale, risks, and opportunities for the librarian as open licensing consultant, trainer, and advocate; growing pains; and surprising connections between OER and scholarly communication. Attendees will be challenged to think about current teaching, research, and library practices and policies that prevent discourse sharing and will leave with new ideas about deeper collaboration with entities outside of their institution.

Speakers
avatar for Tara Cassidy

Tara Cassidy

Director of Library Services, Virginia Community College System
avatar for Olivia Reinauer

Olivia Reinauer

Reference Librarian, Tidewater Community College
Olivia Reinauer is a Reference Librarian at Tidewater Community College. Her professional interests include OER, library instruction, instructional design, outreach, assessment, and user experience.
avatar for Anita Walz

Anita Walz

Asst Dir of Open Ed and Scholarly Comm Librarian, @VTNews
Anita Walz is the Assistant Director for Open Education and Scholarly Communication Librarian at Virginia Tech. She works with faculty, administrators, and staff on local, state, national and international levels to inspire faculty to choose, adapt, and create learning resources which... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

Interpret the Numbers: Putting e-Book Usage Statistics in Context
E-books have been an integral part of library collections for a long time now, but they are still surrounded by controversy. How much our patrons really use them? That seemingly simple question has a very complicated answer that could depend on a number of factors. The e-books’ usage reports mean very little on their own and leave many unanswered questions.
In order to contextualize the usage statistics, the Claremont Colleges Library conducted an analysis of enhanced usage reports in comparison with the total offerings of e-book content available to our users from all major providers, and through all access models. The study aimed to measure turnover rates and shed light on what is not being used, gauge usage (and non-usage) patterns by subject area and publication year, as well as determine the impact, if any, of the different access models. In addition, we compared the subject composition and the age of the e-book collection to the print book collection, and analyzed the usage patterns in the two formats within calendar 2014.
This presentation will highlight the most important findings of the study and discuss their implications for future collection management.

Speakers
avatar for Maria Savova

Maria Savova

Director of Information Resources and Systems, Claremont Colleges Library
Maria oversees the Library's Materials budget and has broad responsibilities for leading the library’s strategy in funding, selecting, and managing information resources for the Claremont Colleges’ user community. She is also responsible for developing innovative, user-centered... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

2:25pm EST

Letting the Data Lead the Way: Pathways of Discovery with Altmetrics
The landscape around alternative metrics has been evolving rapidly. Going from a twitter hashtag in 2011 to a key component in research evaluation at many institutions, metrics that move beyond citation counts and journal impact factor are here to stay.

Metrics can now be harvested and applied to research around usage, captures, mentions, and social media, in addition to citations, giving a much more comprehensive and holistic view of impact. These new metrics are also much more timely than citation metrics and can keep pace with new formats much faster than the entrenched, legacy practices.

However, as institutions begin to utilize these more modern metrics, they often lead to surprising pathways of discovery and uses beyond what they had originally envisioned.

In this panel discussion, Ashley Lowery, Digital Collections Specialist at Georgia Southern University, John McDonald, Associate Dean of Collections for USC Libraries, and Andrea Michalek, President and Co-Founder of Plum Analytics, will discuss the trends in this space, examples of how altmetrics are used in practice, and the somewhat surprising outcomes that they have seen.

The attendees will have ample time to ask questions of the expert panel, and will leave with session with a better understanding of how their university could begin to take advantage of these new metrics, and some of the pitfalls to avoid.

Speakers
avatar for Ashley Lowery

Ashley Lowery

Digital Collections Specialist, Georgia Southern University
Ashley D. Lowery is the Digital Collections Specialist at Georgia Southern University. In this position, she manages the institutional repository, Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. This includes overseeing SelectedWorks author profiles, peer-reviewed journal and conference sites... Read More →
avatar for Andrea Michalek MS

Andrea Michalek MS

President, Plum Analytics
Andrea Michalek co-founded Plum Analytics, with the vision of bringing more modern ways of telling the stories of research to individuals and organizations that fund, perform or publish research. Previously Andrea founded and was the Chief Technologist of EchoFactor, a spin-off division... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

Looks and Sounds Great, but Where Do You Find It? Discovering Multimedia Resources
As investment in image, video, and audio content grows exponentially, stakeholders across the scholarly communication industry are scrambling to ensure multimedia content, both free and fee, is discoverable how and where students and faculty are looking.

This panel discussion provides a 360° review of the challenges, opportunities, standards, and innovation necessary to make multimedia resources findable within academic settings. Panelists will outline their organizations’ evolving strategies for multimedia cataloging and identifiers, SEO and discoverability, and serving the researcher experience. Then panelists will address audience questions and outline tips and tricks for librarians working with content providers, discovery providers, and governing bodies to make audio visual materials more easily searchable and retrievable. Attendees of all familiarity levels will leave with actionable ways to enhance the discoverability of their digital holdings and ideas for interacting with the scholarly community.

Speakers
MH

Mary Huismann

Music/Media Original Cataloger, University of Minnesota
avatar for Elisabeth Leonard

Elisabeth Leonard

Senior Field Editor, SAGE Publications
MS

Mike Showalter

Executive Director, End-User Services, OCLC


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Mitigating Madness: How We Authenticate & Authorize Users to Deliver Databases in a Contractually Complicated Context
During the 2011 overhaul of the Mercer University Libraries website we developed an authentication system to interface with EZProxy and our campus Active Directory system that provides convenient management and delivery of our A-Z database listing. With multiple campuses and seven e-resource privilege groups, we were able to provide persistent URLs for databases to subject librarians, dynamic database lists based upon users’ access privileges, convenient integration with our Content Management System, and a simple backend management interface requiring little expertise to use.

We then sought to improve the situation by organizational and license simplification before our 2014 web site overhaul: We hired a dedicated Licensed Content Librarian and Systems and Technical Services personnel worked tirelessly to streamline our seven privilege groups into two by negotiation and policy changes. We then modified our workflows to encourage this simplicity.

Learn how Technical Services and Systems can design and create an in-house application to ease the dynamic delivery of database information, authentication, and access. Then see how we improved upon that system with organizational changes and better business practices.

Speakers
avatar for Jeremy Brown

Jeremy Brown

Assistant Dean for Technical Services & Systems, Mercer University Library
GT

Geoffrey Timms

Marine Resources Librarian, College of Charleston


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Open Access Funds: Getting a Bigger Bang for Our Bucks
Many libraries offer open access publishing funds to support authors in paying article processing charges (APC) levied by some OA journals. However, there are no standard practices for managing or assessing these funds. This situation prompted the Canadian Association of Research Libraries’ Open Access Working Group (OAWG) to investigate and articulate best practices for successful open access fund management. In spring 2015, as part of this endeavor, the OAWG surveyed the 14 Canadian academic libraries with OA funds to review their criteria and collect feedback. The need for this information is increasingly important given that the sustainability of these funds is under review at most institutions. Budget constraints are forcing some institutions revisit or reconfigure these funds. At the same time, Canada’s new Tri-Agency Open Access Policy on Publications (effective May 2015) mandates open access for funded research and is increasing the demand from researchers who are seeking financial support from their institutions to pay APCs. This session will share the survey results, including the overview of relevant findings from international praxis and professional literature. The presenters will highlight the project’s recommendations regarding best practices for open access publishing fund management as well as other strategies developed by international agencies including SPARC. Audience members are invited to contribute comments, ideas and experiences from their own institutions. Attendees will take away ideas for establishing and managing open access publishing funds.

Speakers
avatar for Elizabeth Yates (she/her)

Elizabeth Yates (she/her)

Research and Scholarly Communication Librarian, Brock University
Elizabeth Yates is a Research and Scholarly Communication Librarian at Brock University and a member of several groups working to advance equity for members of the 2S&LGBTQ+ community.
avatar for Bobby Glushko

Bobby Glushko

Head of Scholarly Communications and Copyright, University of Toronto
Bobby’s research and professional interests cluster around the role of the academic research library as a nexus of the teaching, research, and service missions of the university. He is particularly interested in how librarians can act as leaders in cooperation with a diverse set... Read More →
avatar for Crystal Hampson

Crystal Hampson

Assistant Librarian, University of Saskatchewan
Crystal Hampson is Acquisitions Librarian at the University of Saskatchewan, where she has worked since 2011. Prior to arriving at the University of Saskatchewan, Crystal worked in public libraries, in technical services and managerial positions, and for a library consortium. Her... Read More →
avatar for Patricia Moore

Patricia Moore

Systems Librarian, Digital Projects and Technologies, Carleton University


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Saying Sayonara to the STL: Strategy, Scale and Systematic Abandonment in the Ebook Marketplace
In 2014 the University of Wisconsin-Madison initiated a review of its ebook collection development program. This project led to the development of a concise ebook strategy that was designed to guide decision-making and practices surrounding the acquisition of ebooks. It also led to the end of the Libraries’ short-term loan (STL)-based demand driven acquisitions (DDA) program. This ebook acquisition program, which had been in place for nearly four years, was heavily used, well managed, consistently on budget and, in many ways, working precisely as expected, yet the decision to eliminate this program was fairly straightforward.

This session will explore the development of UW-Madison’s ebook strategy and how it is guiding the Libraries’ ebook program. It will also examine factors, including Libraries’ new ebook strategy, actions by publishers and ebook providers, and the local environment, that led the Libraries to end its STL-based DDA program. Finally, how the Libraries continue to employ just-in-time and data-driven acquisition models will be discussed.

Speakers
avatar for Doug Way

Doug Way

Associate University Librarian for Collections and Research Services, University of Wisconsin-Madison
Doug Way is the associate university librarian for collections and research services at the University of Wisconsin-Madison where he provides leadership for the library's collection development and management, resource sharing, and scholarly communications programs. Doug has written... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

Shotgun Session
1. Thoughts on Building Unique and Diverse Collections 
Annie Belanger

Literature abounds on how internalized acculturated biases lead to inadvertently more narrow collections in terms of author diversity, an impact that starts with editors flowing through to vendors and selectors. Even when we acknowledge our biases, the tools we use may carry them as well as time to hand curate a collection remain an issue. Explore thoughts ways to leverage current vendor services to ensure robust, yet more diverse collections. 
Audience will be posed a series of questions for self-reflection on how they approach collection development and whether their approach build diverse collections. Audience will see ways to leverage vendor services to save time on core collections, allowing time for hand curation of unique collections.  

2. Show Me The Data (Sets) for the Natural Sciences
Barry Brown

This session will provide a brief overview of what's going on with data sets in the Natural Sciences. Questions addressed include: How widely are journal articles citing data sets? How often are researchers sharing them and making them easily available to others? What repositories are primarily being used? Have these patterns changed over the last few years. Results will be based on preliminary surveys of the most impactful journals in the Natural Sciences. 

3. From Chaos to Community: Two Libraries Finding a Unified Direction 
Melissa Johnson, Rod Bustos, Sandra Bandy

In January 2013, the University System of Georgia consolidated a health sciences university and a predominantly undergraduate liberal arts university. This provided several challenges to the newly formed University Libraries. Each library utilizes different cataloging rules, National Library of Medicine call numbers and Medical Subject Headings are used on the Health Sciences Campus and Library of Congress call numbers and subject headings used on the liberal arts campus. After recognizing the differences in the catalog records, the Libraries asked “Where do we go from here?”A cataloging subcommittee was formed to identify ways to consolidate bibliographic records, streamline holdings, and turn chaos into community.  The Electronic Resources and Serials Librarian from the liberal arts campus, the Chair of Content Management from the Health Sciences Campus, and the Assistant Director for Library Systems will discuss the differences in the records, changes implemented to unify the catalog, and how the two libraries came together to meet this goal. They will also discuss the challenges for future direction. 

4. Using Bibliometrics analysis as a decision-making tool for serials' subscriptions 
Eric Archambeault

Academic institutions are facing significant financial pressures and are increasingly required to maximize their return on investment. Bibliometrics analyses that combine the number of times that researchers publish in a journal or cite a journal along with evaluating open access availability provides a robust evidence-based decision-making tool. The number of times that researchers publish in a journal or cite a journal provides powerful usage data, particularly if it can be combined with data of article downloads. When these data are combined with the proportion of papers in that journal that are available in Open Access, then one obtains a very powerful tool. 
More specifically, the bibliometrics analysis can point to journals that are rarely cited, published into, and downloaded by researchers and students in a university, potentially making these journals non-renewal candidates.  For those few articles that are used from that canceled journal, if they are not available in Open Access, they could simply be retrieved through Inter-library loans. Conversely, if researchers at that university frequently publish in and cite a journal, then it is a good candidate for a new or renewed subscription. 
In this presentation, we will focus on this evidence-based approach as a tool to maintain and even to increase library users’ level of satisfaction, while helping librarians deal with difficult budgetary decisions. The attendees will learn how to make sense of different metrics and bibliometrics analysis from real life and pragmatic examples and they will be encouraged to share their questions, concerns and feedback throughout the presentation.  

Speakers
SB

Sandra Bandy

Chair of Content Management, Georgia Regents Universit
avatar for Barry  Brown

Barry Brown

Dean, University of Montana
RB

Rod Bustos

Assistant Director for Library Systems, Georgia Regents University
avatar for Annie Bélanger

Annie Bélanger

Associate University Librarian, Information Resources & Academic Excellence, University of Waterloo
Annie Bélanger is the Associate University Librarian, Information Resources & Academic Excellence, for the University of Waterloo. In this role, she provides executive leadership for collection lifecycle management as well as for information services, instruction, user engagement... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

Supporting Digital Humanities: Challenges and Opportunities for Libraries
Many colleges and universities are seeing a greater emphasis on digital humanities. What can libraries do to support this rapidly evolving field? Which digital humanities resources and services do faculty expect the library to provide? What kinds of library/faculty digital humanities partnerships are most productive? A panel with a librarian and faculty will discuss the challenges, opportunities, and future trends for digital humanities in academic libraries.

Speakers
avatar for Tim Bucknall

Tim Bucknall

Assistant Dean of Libraries, UNC Greensboro
Tim is founder and convener of the Carolina Consortium, and an inventor of Journal Finder, the first Open URL link resolver. He was recently named the 2014 ACRL Academic/Research Librarian of the Year.
BS

Bob Scott

Digital Humanities Librarian, Columbia University
DT

David Thomas

Visiting Professor of History, University of South Florida


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Embassy Suites

2:25pm EST

Teaching the Library to Students of Higher Education
The growth of administration in higher education, while regrettable to many faculty members, is a fact of postsecondary life. Many managerial professionals are trained in graduate programs in higher education at major state universities and leading private institutions. This presentation reports on a course in “Scholarly Communications in the Digital Age” introduced in 2015 at one of the largest of such programs. The online course, to be offered again in 2016 via the Big Ten’s Committee on Institutional Cooperation (CIC), features scholarly and scientific information behavior, and includes attention to the history, mission, and operations of the library. A central aim of the course is to guide students of higher education toward recognition of the library’s roles and how they are changing. There is attention also to themes like “open access” and “altmetrics,” along with study of resources from OCLC and ACRL (and from Against the Grain). The course displays the library as a location for digital innovation at a time when postsecondary administrators need to know as much as possible about the impact of technology on faculty work. Participants in the session will learn how the library can be a subject of teaching outside information schools. And they will be invited to contribute their own views about how best to represent the library in the formal study of higher education. A handout (and resource for discussion) will summarize, based on the course, the benefits of introducing scholarly communications and the library into the field’s PhD curriculum.

Speakers
SW

Steve Weiland

Professor of Higher Education, Michigan State University


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

The Unknown Path—Evaluating Electronic Resources for Access-Based Collection Development
In 2015, the University of North Texas Libraries implemented an access-based collection development policy. This new policy, coupled with the increase of interdisciplinary studies at the University, dictated the necessity for a more exhaustive evaluation of continuing resources such as databases, journals, and standing orders before they are purchased. The Collection Development department created a rubric of criteria to address all aspects of the evaluation. This session will provide a brief description of access-based collection development and a detailed discussion of the rubric’s criteria and how it will be implemented. The session will close with an opportunity for the audience to provide additional criteria for evaluation.

Speakers
avatar for Laurel Sammonds Crawford, MLIS

Laurel Sammonds Crawford, MLIS

Head of Collection Development, University of North Texas Libraries
Laurel has a BS in Zoology and earned her MLIS from Louisiana State University. Her research interests include collection analysis, electronic resource use and delivery, and library leadership.
avatar for Erin Johanna DeWitt Miller, MLIS

Erin Johanna DeWitt Miller, MLIS

Head, Media Library, University of North Texas


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Laurens Room, Francis Marion Hotel

2:25pm EST

When a New Discovery Layer Impacts Collections—Excellence, Improvement, and Frustration
As an early adopter of ALMA/Primo from Ex Libris, the University of Texas at Dallas Libraries faced a number of challenges concerning access and ownership of resources. The session will illustrate how a discovery layer exposes inconsistencies within the catalog. New advanced technology inherent in an advanced system can enable staff to eliminate or reduce the inconsistencies and enhance the retrieval of relevant works. While the literature on discovery systems often provides insight into the success of customers using an interface, this session will involve how technology can improve the catalog for librarians involved with collection development decisions. Examples will include de-duping records for eBooks, changing record displays, and fine-tuning related bibliographic records.

Speakers
avatar for Mingyu Chen

Mingyu Chen

Head of Metadata Services, The University of Texas at Dallas
Mingyu Chen is the Head of Metdata Services at the University of Texas at Dallas. She has more than 10 years’ experience in metadata management. Before joining the University of Texas at Dallas, Mingyu coordinated and developed multiple digital library projects at the University... Read More →
avatar for Ellen Safley

Ellen Safley

Dean of Libraries, University of Texas at Dallas
Ellen Safley is the Dean of Libraries at the University of Texas at Dallas.  Her research interests include enhancing and developing new services for the 21st century library, migrating traditional collections to maximize the acquisition and use of electronic resources, and embracing... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

2:25pm EST

Why Academic Libraries Should Consider Collecting Self-Published Works
Academic libraries should consider collecting self-published (indie) materials since some include appropriate information of potential value to faculty and students. Beyond the stigma of pre-Internet vanity presses, these books account for between 50 and 75 percent of all titles published in the United States, usually as e-books or print-on-demand. An industry has evolved to support these publications. Public libraries are already encountering public requests, mostly for fiction. Reasons for their collection by academic libraries include: (1) importance as source material for current historical events or local history; (2) the documentation of popular culture trends, some not suitable for commercial publication, such as Holocaust denial, anti-vaccination advocacy, and non-mainstream sexual practices; (3) earlier works by currently popular authors; (4) research from independent scholars for narrow topics not viable for commercial publication or when the author wants complete control; (5) inexpensive self-published textbooks to meet one of the most important unmet information needs for students. Finally, major research libraries should evaluate self-published works in areas where their goal is to collect comprehensively. Currently, statistics from vendors show that libraries are not collecting self-published works extensively and are mostly purchasing publications by campus community authors.

Speakers
avatar for Bob Holley

Bob Holley

Professor Emeritus, School of Library & Information Science, Wayne State University
Professor Emeritus, Wayne State University School of Library & Information Science. Bob Holley has been actively involved in collection development since 1980 as an academic librarian, library science professor, and researcher. He was chief collection development officer at the University... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

2:25pm EST

“Where Do We Go from Here?”: Navigating through the Deluge of Research Information
The global body of research information continues to experience unabated growth. According to recent estimates, the Pubmed database - which represents just a fraction of the total literature – adds 2 new abstracts every minute or over a million new records each year. At current rates of growth, global scientific output is set to double approximately every nine years.
Given this veritable deluge of research information, scientists and researchers cannot be expected to identify and examine in detail every new paper that is relevant to their interests. Despite great advances in library technologies this century it takes scientists and academics no less time to read, comprehend, and assess the relevance of a paper today; and there are just far too many papers to read.
We propose to organize a session that focuses on the current uses, issues and opportunities for review journals to serve the research community. This session will highlight approaches by different publishers of review articles, who will discuss their models for leveraging the disciplinary knowledge, expertise and experience of their authors to assist researchers in navigating through the vast - and ever-expanding – corpus of research information. We will reveal how: reviews succinctly summarize the current understanding of a given topic, often synthesizing findings from a hundred or more primary articles; provide a historic overview of the development of the topic; synthesize and integrate diverse aspects of the topic; and they identify holes in knowledge and opportunities for future research directions.

Speakers
avatar for Kamran Naim

Kamran Naim

Director of Partnerships and Initiatives, Annual Reviews
Kamran Naim is Director of Partnerships and Initiatives for the non-profit publisher Annual Reviews in Palo Alto, California, and is also a Doctoral Candidate and Research Lead at the Stanford University Graduate School of Education. His interests span the breadth of scholarly publishing... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 2:25pm - 3:10pm EST
Rutledge Room, Francis Marion Hotel

3:00pm EST

Enduring Traditions: Ironwork of the Holy City Walking Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

Broad Street Tours will be offering walking tours again this year.  Lee Ann Bain and Carol Ezell-Gilson will be your guides.  The daytime tours are two hours in length and cover about a mile distance.  

Learn about Charleston’s magnificent ironwork while strolling through the lovely historic district. Much early ironwork was destroyed in raging fires and many noteworthy gates and fences were donated to the Confederate cause to be melted down for cannonballs and “skins” for the ironclad boats. But, even with the losses, the city retains a wealth of impressive ironworks. Hear the story of Philip Simmons, Charleston’s most famous ironworker, and of earlier blacksmiths who crafted beautiful gates throughout the city.

For more information on all tours check out http://broadstreetbiz.com/walking-tours/charleston-conference-2015/.  Tours are $20.00 per person and payment may be made with cash or check at tour time.  Reservations are required as tour groups are limited to 20 people.

Friday November 6, 2015 3:00pm - 5:00pm EST
TBA

3:00pm EST

General History Walking Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

Broad Street Tours will be offering walking tours again this year.  Lee Ann Bain and Carol Ezell-Gilson will be your guides.  The daytime tours are two hours in length and cover about a mile distance.  

This tour gives a general overview of Charleston’s history from the colonial era onward – through the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, to the city’s rediscovery and revitalization of the past 40 years. Participants will gain insight into Charleston’s early wealth and culture, viewing the city’s impressive public buildings and private mansions. Visitors will learn of architectural influences and other factors that resulted in modifications to original structures, with explanation of the single house, the double house and dependencies.

For more information on all tours check out http://broadstreetbiz.com/walking-tours/charleston-conference-2015/.  Tours are $20.00 per person and payment may be made with cash or check at tour time.  Reservations are required as tour groups are limited to 20 people.

Friday November 6, 2015 3:00pm - 5:00pm EST
TBA

3:30pm EST

Acquisitions in a Nutshell
Designed specifically for those new to the distinctive field of library acquisitions, this session will feature an informal introduction to the basics of acquisitions. A veteran acquisitions librarian, a library director with a background in acquisitions, and a librarian who began her first professional appointment in 2013 will lead this exploration of what it means to be an acquisitions librarian in 2015.

This session will cover issues ranging from acquiring both monographs and serials in all formats to large databases and backfile purchases, and many points in between. Topics of discussion will include similarities and differences between acquisitions and collection development (and how that can vary from library to library), product trials, making ordering decisions, selecting vendors, the timing of purchases, negotiating prices and access options, licensing, communications with constituents, and various services that a company’s representatives can provide to assist librarians.

Participants will leave the session with a better understanding of the options, resources, and support structures available to them in the field of library acquisitions.

Speakers
avatar for Jeff Bailey

Jeff Bailey

Library Director, Arkansas State University
A native of Dayton, Ohio, Jeff Bailey was appointed Director of the Dean B. Ellis Library of Arkansas State University in 2012 after leading the library for three years in an interim capacity. In his academic library career, Jeff has held positions in both public and technical services... Read More →
avatar for Linda Creibaum

Linda Creibaum

Acquisitions and Serials Librarian, Arkansas State University
Linda Creibaum is Acquisitions and Serials Librarian at Arkansas State University, where for the last 15 years she has been fascinated at the change in library resource formats and the nature of the “problems” she solves in her work day. Linda has worked in a variety of library... Read More →
SH

Star Holloway

Collection Management Librarian, Arkansas State University
Star is the Collection Management Librarian at the Dean B. Ellis Library. She received her M.S. in Information Science from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville and her Bachelor’s Degree in Finance with an emphasis in banking at Arkansas State University.


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

3:30pm EST

Assessing the Value of Older Information
Traditionally, usage figures for electronic serials have lumped all years of publication together. New tools allow librarians to distinguish usage according to the year of publication. This allows us to analyze the usage of current material separately from usage of content published in prior years. The relative value of current subscriptions and backfiles has important collection development implications. For example, many libraries subscribe directly to titles that are offered in aggregated databases, but with embargoes. The relative value of current content distinguished from prior years may be useful in re-evaluating such subscription decisions.
This session will discuss tools and techniques for analyzing usage by year of publication according to several measures – including COUNTER’s JR5 report, citation analysis, Google Analytics, ILL statistics, and cost-per-use, and will discuss how librarians can use these tools to aid in decision-making about new purchases and cancellations.

Speakers
avatar for Matt Jabaily

Matt Jabaily

Information Services Librarian, Rhodes College
avatar for Steven Knowlton

Steven Knowlton

Collection Development Librarian, University of Memphis
I'm very interested in innovative metrics to help us learn more about what patrons really want from a library and how they use the library
avatar for James Rodgers

James Rodgers

Acquisitions Librarian, University of Memphis



Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

3:30pm EST

Avoiding Pitfalls of Special Collection Digitization
Looking to digitize a treasured collection at your library, but want to move forward with confidence? Digitizing special collections comes with great rewards: ease of access for students and faculty and no risk of damage to delicate historical documents. This panel of specialists from Catholic University, Smithsonian Archives, Innovation Document Imaging, HTC Global, and Gale will provide best practices for preserving and digitizing precious documents and maximizing library/vendor partnerships while coaching you in avoiding the pitfalls that can result in damage or disaster. Joan Stahl from The Catholic University of America will provide personal insight from her own experience digitizing special collections; William Bennett from the Smithsonian Archives will provide an overview of conservation best practices; Marty Tannenbaum from Innovation Document Imaging will provide a digital capture and imaging overview; Natraj Kumar from HGC Global Services will provide insight into best practices for content conversion; and Ray Bankoski from Gale will share best practices regarding workflow and Q/A. The panel will answer any questions regarding audience members’ current or future projects.

Speakers
avatar for Ray Bankoski

Ray Bankoski

Vice President, Electronic Asset Management, Gale, Cengage Learning
I oversee a multi-million dollar budget for the conversion and quality assurance of digital collections published for the Academic community at Cengage Learning. I Designed and implemented a state of the art quality assurance system to allow for millions of images, metadata and OCR... Read More →
NK

Natraj Kumar

Senior General Manager, HTC Global Services, Inc.
JS

Joan Stahl

Director of Research and Instruction, University Libraries, The Catholic University of America


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

Digital Content Curation: How to Lead Users to Where They Need to Go and Make Sense of What They Find When They Get There
As the amount of content grows in products and across a library holdings there is an increasing need to give the users help in directing them toward the content that they are interested in. Search has worked well but is most useful for users who know pretty much what they are looking for. Better help for users that need to be led to the correct content is in order. There are a broad spectrum of attempts to solve this problem from librarians in the way that they organize their digital collections to the various ways the publisher and platform providers attempt to help solve the problem. This panel looks at the problem from a variety of view points to see what the issues are and what seems to be working or not.

Looking to compare/contrast librarian, publisher, and vendor points of view on the panel. Would also want to query the audience for their feedback.
Audience should expect to learn best practices, and interesting new approaches to the curation problem.

Speakers
TB

Tom Beyer

Director of Platform Services, Safari Inc
Tom is responsible for providing the vision for the PubFactory platform. He has more than fifteen years experience devoted exclusively to building and refining the PubFactory platform, which includes conceptualizing and actualizing platform implementations for the IMF, OUP, SAGE... Read More →
avatar for Michael Levine-Clark

Michael Levine-Clark

Dean of Libraries, University of Denver
avatar for Will Schweitzer

Will Schweitzer

Director, Product Development, AAAS/Science
I head up product management and product development for AAAS/Science family of journals. I'm also responsible for Science Advances, the Science family's open access journal, and AAAS's new journals, Science Immunology and Science Robotics. My areas of expertise include journal acquisitions... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Embassy Suites

3:30pm EST

Digital Humanities Media – Project Preservation and Promotion
As increasing numbers of scholars and students continue to experiment and engage in Digital Humanities, real value is generated as scholars create new knowledge, whether using technology to address age-old questions in a novel way, or identifying new questions to pursue. Many forays into Digital Humanities produce not just knowledge, but also discrete digital outputs, whether it be a website, digital images, software code, or other digital objects that have a value well beyond the scope of the original work. Once the digital humanities research is complete, where do these assets go? Our panel will address how these can be preserved, expanded on, shared, and promoted over time.

Drawing on Artstor’s experience with our 2015 Digital Humanities Award Winners (projects include Historic Dress – Smith College, and Sacred Conflicts: Religious Violence in Comparative Perspective – Northern Illinois University) and on the 2014 Ithaka S&R study “Sustaining the Digital Humanities Host Institution Support Beyond the Start-up Phase”, our panel (consisting of HE librarians and Nancy Maron
Program Director, Sustainability and Scholarly Communications at Ithaka) will talk attendees through some of the challenges faced by project leaders. Attendees will learn about the value that digital humanities projects and resources deliver, how these can bolster that institution’s mission and aims, the tools and institutional costs required to undertake and to support them for the long term, and about the most effective ways to marshal that support across an institution.

A question and answer session will follow the discussion.

Speakers
avatar for Elisa Lanzi

Elisa Lanzi

Director of Digital Strategies and Services, Smith College
Smith College
avatar for Nancy Maron

Nancy Maron

President, BlueSky to BluePrint, LLC
Independent consultant, researcher and strategist, helping publishers and leaders of digital initiatives develop strong business plans and sound funding models.


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

Discovery as Panacea: Is EDS the Solution?
Following up on the 2012 session: “The Truth Is Out…How They Really Search,” where the presenters reported on their Google-funded study of how students do on-line research, this session will include tapes of students who are instructed to do on-line research but who must start by using the library’s discovery system before proceeding to Google or any venue of their own choice.

The presenters found eight major problems in the students’ research habits: reliance on Google, confusion within the library website, problems finding and articulating keywords, lack of Boolean understanding, impatience with longer texts, preconceived conclusions and solutions to research questions, abandonment of hierarchical thinking, and confusion between research structures. These issues will be discussed in detail. The presentation will include visual examples of student on-line research behaviors in the form of screen recordings (done with full IRB and student approval).

The session will include suggestions on how to help students solve some of these problems; however, the main objective of the session will be to share these research results with other public service librarians and faculty, in order to work together to find ways to help students find more successful and efficient ways to do on-line research. The presenters will allot time for audience feedback and discussion. Based on our experience during the 2012 presentation, we expect lively discussion to take place.

Speakers
BB

Beth Bloom

Instruction Librarian and Associate Professor, Seton Hall University
Beth Bloom, Associate Professor/Librarian II, at Seton Hall University,has an MA in Musicology, in addition to her MLS. She is liaison to the departments of art, music, women’s studies, nursing, and various health sciences. She coordinates Bibliographic Instruction and is a co-recipient... Read More →
avatar for Marta Deyrup

Marta Deyrup

Librarian and Professor, Seton Hall University
Marta Deyrup is Professor and Head of Technical Services at Seton Hall University Libraries in South Orange, New Jersey. She holds a MLS from Rutgers University and a PhD from the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures, Columbia University.


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Does Format Matter? Reader Preferences in an Academic Library Context
Although many academic libraries have dramatically increased their ebook acquisitions in recent years, questions linger about format preferences. When a scholarly monograph is made available in both print and electronic formats, which format will users prefer? Does format even matter? At the University of Toronto Libraries we analyzed usage data for scholarly monographs from three key university presses, covering thousands of titles over several years of publication. By comparing print and ebook usage patterns of identical titles, our goal was to examine format preferences, investigate whether use of one format is linked to the other, and determine if there are differences in usage across subject disciplines or publishers. Through this analysis, our aim is to question whether continued acquisition of the same content in multiple formats is necessary and desirable, especially in an era of rapid technological change, increased pressure on library acquisitions budgets, and diminishing physical storage space. By sharing the empirical data from our large-scale study and exploring the interconnections among the various factors that may affect the use of scholarly books, we hope the gathered evidence can assist libraries in making better informed collection building decisions. Our discussion will engage librarians and content providers alike in contemplating where to focus energy and resources to better meet the needs of our users in an ever-changing information environment.

Speakers
avatar for Marlene van Ballegooie

Marlene van Ballegooie

Metadata Technologies Manager, University of Toronto
Marlene van Ballegooie is the Metadata Technologies Manager at the University of Toronto Libraries. She received her MISt degree from the Faculty of Information Studies, University of Toronto. At the University of Toronto Libraries, Marlene is responsible for managing the Metadata... Read More →
JR

Jen Robertson

Liaison & Education Librarian, University of Toronto
Jen Robertson is the EResource & Mathematics Web and Scholarly Communications Librarian at the University of Toronto Libraries where she manages electronic resource holdings and works with the Mathematical Sciences Library on web and scholarly communications projects.
WY

Weijing Yuan

Head, Licensing and e-Resource Acquisitions, University of Toronto Libraries


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Rutledge Room, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Eeny, Meeny, Miny Moe--E-Books Changed our Workflow
As the popularity and sheer number of e-books increased, it became evident that our existing process and/or workflow for acquiring and cataloging them would need some modification. The presentation will explain how the Carnegie Mellon University Libraries Technical Services implemented changes in workflow for ordering and cataloging e-books. Including the topics of technology, user expectations and getting reference librarians on board, we’ll cover the why of e-books, what has gone well and where we go from here.

Speakers
TH

Terry Hurlbert

Cataloging Senior Librarian, Cataloging, Carnegie Mellon University


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Emptying the Dump Truck: How to Handle Large Donations
All libraries receive donations, and sometimes the library has no choice but to accept them. An unusually large donation can overwhelm the whole libraries’ operations. Planning is key for effectively and efficiently handling a large donation. Having a plan ensures coordination across departments and makes even very large donations manageable.

Learning Objectives
1. Participants will recognize the scope of personnel and material coordination necessary to absorb a large donation.
2. Participants will be encouraged to make a donation policy part of their collection development policy.
3. Participants will recognize the benefits of large donations.

Outline:
I. Introduction
a. The Professor and his collection
II. The Dump Truck Arrives
a. Getting the books to campus

Speakers
avatar for Robert Weaver

Robert Weaver

Collection Management Librarian, Liberty University
We get a ridiculous amount of donations. I get to sort them all out. I am an Orthodox Christian Deacon.I'm branching out into freelance book indexing.I'm a short story writer and roleplaying adventure writer.


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Laurens Room, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Multimedia Content in Discovery Services: Effectively Facilitating End-User Discovery
This session will explore the issues that we face with multimedia content in discovery platforms, like EBSCO Discovery Service and ProQuest's Summon Service. Integrating a wide array of resources presents the inevitable challenge of effectively facilitating access to diverse content. When the majority of content in these systems is text, how can we ensure that multimedia content will be as discoverable? How can discovery service vendors and multimedia content providers work together to address the issues, and what can we learn from the experiences of our end-users in the library community? From data mapping and search algorithms, to interface design and user workflows, this session will seek to uncover the challenges that we face in making multimedia content in these services discoverable to end-users. A speaker from a multimedia content provider (Artstor), a discovery service vendor, and a representative from the end-user library community will present on their experiences and challenges. Questions for each of these stakeholders in the audience will be posed to shed light on their current practices and experiences. The discussion will be aimed at developing best practices for facilitating discovery of multimedia content in these services.

Speakers
EP

Elizabeth Peele

Systems Librarian, Emory University
ES

Elizabeth Schneider

User Relations Manager, Technical Services Lead, Artstor


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Positioning for Success: Aligning Content Strategies to Meet 21st Century Collection Challenges
The role of building collections is multi-faceted and distributed. Departments including collection development, special collections, archives, and IR participate in defining policies and goals. These facets of a library’s content strategy may not be well aligned as each department will have different collecting objectives and audience. Silos result, with different units taking ownership of content types and platforms, making it difficult to strategically and collaboratively address the challenges of an evolving scholarship landscape.
A collections program must integrate the management of physical and digital content, licensed and owned materials, published and unpublished works, and traditional and rapidly emerging new scholarship products such as data, web archiving, blogs, images, and multimedia. In this environment, the content strategy must be broader than print or electronic format decisions. It should encompass all streams of content so that no formats are overlooked and an organization has policies and procedures in place to acquire them.
This presentation will describe UNLV’s ongoing efforts to develop a collaborative and content driven strategy for all collecting. The session will provide attendees with an overview of the complexity of collecting in today’s landscape and will highlight opportunities involved with cross-organizational collaborations and policy setting. Attendees will learn about strategies and collaborative approaches based on the experiences of UNLV librarians and their efforts to proactively align collecting efforts across the organization.

Speakers
avatar for Annette Day

Annette Day

Div Director, Collections/Acquisitions/Discovery, University of Nevada, Las Vegas Libraries
avatar for John Novak

John Novak

Collection Development Strategies Librarian, University of Maryland, College Park
John Novak is the head of the Scholarly Communication Initiatives department at UNLV. This department manages Digital Scholarship@UNLV, UNLV's institutional repository, and leads and supports UNLV Libraries scholarly communication and research service efforts. He has published articles... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Cooper Room, Courtyard Marriott

3:30pm EST

Preserving the Past for the Future: Moving Towards Best Practices and Tools for Thoughtful Monographs Withdrawals
Speakers will present significant findings from a 2015 survey of ARL and Oberlin Group Libraries to learn how institutions make decisions to withdraw or retain print monographs. The survey was part of a two-pronged national study led by preservation and conservation experts to better understand what kinds of data, policies, data sharing mechanisms and other communication strategies libraries need to make informed decisions about monograph withdrawals in their collections. This session will look at how policies are (or aren’t) developed, what kinds of data are (or aren’t) used, and which stakeholders are (or aren’t) consulted. The speakers will examine trends in institutions by type and size (public vs private, state institution vs college), and how trends correlate to institutional missions. The session will conclude with a facilitated audience discussion about next steps for developing and sharing best practices and improving communication about selection for withdrawal.

Speakers
avatar for Mary Miller

Mary Miller

Director of Collection Management and Preservation, University of Minnesota
Mary Miller is the Director of Collection Management and Preservation at the University of Minnesota Libraries in Minneapolis, MN.   She has written and spoken on archives and preservation, shared print programs, and consortial collection management.  Her current research interests... Read More →
avatar for Jennifer Hain Teper

Jennifer Hain Teper

Head of Preservation, University of Illinois
Jennifer Hain Teper is Head of Preservation, University Libraries, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, and graduated from the University of Texas at Austin with an MSLIS and CAS in the conservation of library and archive materials in 2000. She oversaw the construction of the... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

Purchasing EBooks from Life and Physical Science Society Publishers: Trends and Considerations
Ebook publishers are still searching for the best way to package and sell titles. Their changeable nature results in varied usability and access considerations for libraries. The objective of this session is to highlight trends and practices in eBook publishing by society publishers in the life and physical sciences. The study will be modeled on previously completed research examining major eBook publishers such as Springer and Elsevier (Kerby & Trei, in press). The presenters will explore eBook availability and purchasing options, as well as any terms affecting access and usability, such as Digital Rights Management (DRM) restrictions, usage allowances, usability factors, and the availability of MARC records. The result of this analysis will be the identification of guidelines for collection managers when purchasing eBooks from society publishers. The importance of collaboration between collection managers in related disciplines will be discussed, as well as methods to enhance collaboration. Questions and comments from the audience will be encouraged in order to facilitate conversation. Audience members can expect to leave the session with practical information about eBook offerings from specific society publishers, what to consider when making purchases, and guidelines for collaborating with other collection managers and librarians at their institutions.

Kerby, E.E., Trei, K. (in press). Minding the Gap: eBook Package Purchasing. "Collection Building".

Speakers
avatar for Erin Kerby

Erin Kerby

Veterinary Medicine Librarian and Assistant Professor, University Library, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
avatar for Kelli Trei

Kelli Trei

Biosciences Librarian, Associate Professor, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign Library
Kelli Trei manages the collection and performs instruction, research, and reference services for the Schools of Life Sciences: Integrative Biology and Molecular & Cellular Biology, and the Carl R. Woese Institute for Genomic Biology. Her research interests include investigating the... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

3:30pm EST

Scholarly Communication Boot Camp: Getting Liaisons Up to Speed
Liaison librarians everywhere are being asked to share more and more in the work of scholarly communication. In many cases they need extensive training to be prepared to talk about these topics with faculty and students. Since scholarly communication is a broad topic covering everything from author’s rights to open educational resources, it is difficult to find a single webinar or conference that will expose liaisons to everything they need to know in this arena. Join East Carolina University’s Scholarly Communication Librarian and Head of Collection Development as they talk about how they crafted a year-long scholarly communication boot camp using only free webinars and self-taught sessions designed to bring liaisons up to speed in this very important area. Attendees can expect to learn where to locate free resources when building such a program, the thought-processes that went into crafting the boot camp and whether it has been successful so far. Discussion will be heavily encouraged throughout the session.

Speakers
avatar for Jeanne Hoover

Jeanne Hoover

Head, Scholarly Communication, East Carolina University
avatar for Cindy Shirkey

Cindy Shirkey

Head of Collection Development, East Carolina University
Cindy Shirkey is the Collection Development Librarian for the Humanities at East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina.  She received her M.A. in English Literature from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and her M.S.L.I.S. from the University of Illinois... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

SHARE and the Open Science Framework
SHARE is building a free, open data set about scholarly research activities across their lifecycle. In this session, SHARE and OSF project leaders will discuss ways that libraries and publishers can participate and benefit from an open data set about research activity, and contribute to open practices that benefit the research community. We will update the community on the progress of SHARE Notify, currently processing and freely distributing millions of research release events from sources including ArXiv, Figshare, PLOS, PubMed Central, and a number of institutional repositories. We will share progress on expanding the number of data providers and enhancing those notifications to ensure they are a timely, comprehensive reliable source of data for universities about their own research output.

SHARE is an open source development project led by three higher education associations (ARL, AAU, and APLU) in partnership with the Center for Open Science, a nonprofit technology start-up. The Open Science Framework is a set of tools to enable openness and reduce practical and technical barriers to sharing research, including workspace and persistent identifiers for stages of research activity (e.g., research design, data collection, manuscript versions) Through the SHARE partnership, these tools can be leveraged by and integrated with the unit of the university responsible for long-term stewardship of that complex set of research activities, the library and its institutional repository. Repository managers, collection development librarians, e-resources librarians, standards bodies, publishers and more can all participate in building and benefiting from SHARE.

Speakers
avatar for Judy Ruttenberg

Judy Ruttenberg

Senior Director of Scholarship and Policy, Association of Research Libraries
Judy Ruttenberg leads ARL’s priority areas of Advocacy & Public Policy and Scholars & Scholarship, with a strong emphasis on open science and open scholarship (including new publishing models), and research data sharing. This work is done in partnership with federal agencies, scholarly communities, and peer associations in the United States, Canada, and internationally. Judy is also involved in ARL’s work advancing universal design and accessi... Read More →
AS

Andrew Sallans

Partnerships, Collaborations, and Funding Manager, Center for Open Science


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

Shotgun Session
1. Library Publishing is the New Black
William Kane

Session will illustrate (via slides and facts) how library publishing has changed everything, including how: Library Publishing Coalition is the new Book Expo America, one dollar is the new free, post is the new print, streaming is the new downloading, share is the new send, collaborate is the new control, articles are the new books, charticles are the new articles, devices are the new shelves, bookstores are the new libraries, libraries are the new bookstores, borrowing is the new buying, buying is the new borrowing, billion is the new million, flops are the new bestsellers, commissions are the new advances, "you can judge a book by its cover” is the new “you can’t judge a book by its cover.” “50 Shades of Grey” is the new “Bible,” print-on-demand is the new traditional, libraries are the new platforms, recording is the new publishing, content creators are the new cicadas, links are the new footnotes, and you’re welcome is the new thank you. 

2. Ebooks, Community Management, and the Future(s) of the Global Open Knowledgebase
Kristen Wilson, Jennifer  Solomon

The Global Open Knowledgebase (GOKb) is an open data repository that describes electronic journals and books as they are offered in the academic publishing supply chain. The data in GOKb is freely available to libraries, academic publishers, library service providers, and the public using a web-based interface and APIs. By employing a community management approach to data curation, GOKb aims to maximize the network effect and enable users to contribute to the quality of its knowledgebase data. 

In January 2015, GOKb launched a public preview of its services and announced that the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation would fund the project for a second phase of development, which includes enhancements to the web-based interface and APIs, the addition ebooks in the knowledgebase,  and an exploration of GOKb’s intersections within the scholarly communications ecosystem.

This presentation will describe the goals and purpose of GOKb, provide a brief project update, and explore how Phase 2 developments will influence the long-term vision for the project. The presenter will discuss the challenges, successes, and lessons learned from each facet of the project. Attendees will also learn about next steps for GOKb and opportunities for community involvement. 

3. Does Stow It = Throw It? Shared Print Repositories, Deselection, and Disposal
Rebecca Crist 

Libraries participate in shared print retention programs for a number of reasons—a commitment to preservation or a desire to maximize resources efficiently—but there is little doubt that many libraries collaborate on print retention to free up local shelf space. Free space requires weeding duplicated volumes, however, and some libraries are finding that option is not as simple as it first seemed. This session will explore issues surrounding weeding and withdrawal related to participation in a shared print program. How do programs communicate retained titles? How reliable are storage commitments? How do overlapping commitments and multiple resource-sharing networks foster or hinder withdrawal? What are the costs and labor associated with deselecting local resources? Participants will learn how the CIC’s Shared Print Repository participants handle these issues, and how these efforts fit into a national landscape of retention commitments. 

4. Data Visualization for Scholarly Communications
Andrea Michalek

In a world where the pace of scholarly communications and amount of data is rapidly increasing, using technology to make sense out of all of the data is paramount.
This shotgun session will cover:- Categories of data that can be mined around scholarly output- Data visualization approaches for representing the output of a university, grant, department, researcher, and each artifact produced- Pros and cons of different data visualization approaches- Real world examples of how these visualizations are being used 

Speakers
avatar for Rebecca Crist

Rebecca Crist

Project Manager, Committee on Institutional Cooperation
Shared print storage, weather data, or how the Cubs' implosion was the inevitable heartbreak we should have expected
avatar for William Kane

William Kane

Digital Publishing, Wake Forest University
William P. Kane is the Director of Digital Publishing at Wake Forest University.  They checked, and he is a librarian, with an MLS from the University of Pittsburgh -- from there something about his having been a janitor, then a millworker, and then a schoolteacher in Pennsylvania... Read More →
avatar for Andrea Michalek MS

Andrea Michalek MS

President, Plum Analytics
Andrea Michalek co-founded Plum Analytics, with the vision of bringing more modern ways of telling the stories of research to individuals and organizations that fund, perform or publish research. Previously Andrea founded and was the Chief Technologist of EchoFactor, a spin-off division... Read More →
avatar for Jennifer Solomon

Jennifer Solomon

GOKB Editor, NC State Libraries
avatar for Kristen Wilson

Kristen Wilson

Project Manager / Business Analyst, Index Data
I work with libraries to design and build open source software. I'm also VP/president-elect of NASIG.


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

The Digital Academia Power Struggle
According to the Scholarly Kitchen Chefs, one of the things to have the biggest impact on scholarly publishing in 2015 is the publication of data and objects (like multimedia, application code. While we have seen the launch of ‘data journals’ from the like of Elsevier and Nature in the past 12 months, we have also seen the pressure from funders for institutions to be better managing the digital products of research carried within their walls.

Funders are increasingly requiring grantees to deposit their raw research data in appropriate public archives or stores in order to facilitate the validation of results and further work by other researchers. According to the JISC and RLUK funded Sherpa Juliet site, globally there are now 34 funders who require data archiving and 16 who encourage it.

So are we on course for a collision between publishers and institutions over who has control over the digital products of research. Previous attempts by institutions to retake control of the papers through institutional repositories have been beneficial, but have not stemmed the profit margins of the big publishers. This is mainly due to the culture of academia, where for 350 years papers have been the currency and for the last 50, impact factor has been the value. This session will explore how the web enabled world of multiple digital outputs is playing out and predict what could happen in the next 12-60 months. Either way, it’ll be an interesting journey!

Speakers
avatar for Mark Hahnel

Mark Hahnel

CEO, Figshare
avatar for April Hathcock

April Hathcock

Director of Scholarly Communications & Info Policy; Faculty Affairs Coordinator, NYU
April Hathcock is the Scholarly Communications Librarian at NYU where she educates the campus community on issues of ownership, access, and rights in the research lifecycle. She received her J.D. and LL.M. in International and Comparative Law from Duke University School of Law and... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

3:30pm EST

Understanding Interoperability with an Eye on Discovery
Libraries, like any enterprise, deploy a large number of software applications from a variety of vendors. With an ever-growing array of software applications – from next-gen ILS to discovery – libraries can choose what works best. And they can do this thanks to a key technological and business concept that has defined the software industry and has enabled choice: “interoperability”.

So what is meant with interoperability? And, more specifically, which applications should in fact be interoperable and why? What technical standards enable interoperability? When applications work together, the end-user stands to benefit. Panelists will look at the end-user experience and benefits when applications such as the ILS, the learning management system, and library engagements solutions work seamlessly with discovery.

Speakers
avatar for Neil Block

Neil Block

VP, Global Open Source Innovation, EBSCO
DG

Don Gilstrap

Dean of University Libraries, Wichita State University


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

3:30pm EST

What’s My Motivation, Darling? Inspiring Researchers to Build and Measure the Reach and Impact of their Work
Researchers can use many different channels to build awareness of their work. Many are overwhelmed by the options, and less than confident with the tools; others simply don’t see any value in this kind of outreach, but are increasingly being pressured to do it nonetheless. Librarians often find themselves being asked for guidance - what do the different tools do and which ones are effective? This session will help you answer those questions, by providing a high-level overview of several outreach tools and channels, and of the various metrics by which their effectiveness can be assessed. We will provide a take-home summary of the landscape - sign up in advance to add tools to the list that will be covered.

Speakers
avatar for Sara Rouhi

Sara Rouhi

Director of Engagement & Advocacy for Altmetric and Dimensions, Digital Science
Sara Rouhi is Director of Engagement & Advocacy for Dimensions with responsibility for education and outreach in the US and Canada for both Digital Science’s new Dimensions platform and Digital Science’s alternative metrics company, Altmetric. She... Read More →
avatar for David Sommer

David Sommer

Product Director and Co-founder, Kudos
David is Product Director and Co-founder of Kudos - the award winning service for researchers, institutions and publishers to help maximise the impact of published work. David has over 20 years' of experience in the global publishing industry, having held senior technology and sales... Read More →
avatar for Graham Stone

Graham Stone

Information Resources Manager, University of Huddersfield
Graham is Information Resources Manager at the University of Huddersfield UK where he manages the library’s information resources budget, including acquisitions, subscriptions and APC payments. He also manages the University Repository and University Press. Graham has been involved... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 3:30pm - 4:15pm EST
Citadel Green Room, Embassy Suites

4:15pm EST

Refreshment Break
Friday November 6, 2015 4:15pm - 4:45pm EST
TBA

4:45pm EST

Hyde Park Debate. Resolved: Altmetrics are Overrated.
In Favor: Jason Priem, CEO, Impactstory (Invited - not yet confirmed) 
Opposed: Maria Bonn, Senior Lecturer, Graduate School of Library and Information Science, University of Illinois

The debate will be conducted in general accordance with Oxford Union rules. All in the audience will vote their opinion on the resolution before the debate begins, and the vote totals will be recorded. Each speaker will offer a formal opening statement, followed by a response to each other's statements, and then we'll open the floor to discussion. At the conclusion of the debate, another vote will be taken. The winner of the debate is the one who caused the most audience members to change their votes. Members of the audience have an opportunity to make comments and pose questions as well. Join us for what is sure to be a lively discussion, and come ready to share your opinions!

Moderators
avatar for Rick Anderson

Rick Anderson

Assoc. Dean for Collections & Schol Comm, University of Utah

Speakers
avatar for Maria Bonn

Maria Bonn

Associate Professor, MS/LIS and CAS Program Director, University of Illinois Urbana Champaign
Maria Bonn is an Associate Professor and Director of the MS in Library and Information Science program in the School of Information Sciences at the University of Illinois Urbana Champaign. Her research and teaching focuses on academic librarianship and the role of libraries in scholarly... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 4:45pm - 5:30pm EST
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

6:00pm EST

Networking Happy Hour
Mix and mingle with other conference attendees over a beverage and a snack while visiting the Poster Sessions. Appetizers will be provided and a cash bar will be available to purchase beverages.

Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Outside Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

A Convoluted Web: Reusing Metadata to Highlight Faculty Scholarship
What would happen if the same metadata creates multiple structures that focuses on highlighting faculty scholarship? At Georgia Southern University, the library staff reuses the same metadata to produce virtual bibliographies and bookshelves, faculty profiles, altmetrics, and an expertise search. Peer-reviewed publications initially are entered into departmental bibliographies and bookshelves in our institutional repository, Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. Only publications that faculty have published while at Georgia Southern are included. These citations are collected into university-wide bibliographies and bookshelves and SelectedWorks faculty profiles. The SelectedWorks faculty profiles also include peer-reviewed publications that faculty produced outside of Georgia Southern as well as non-published works such as presentations. Our SelectedWorks metadata is then transferred to Plum Analytics (providing altmetrics) and Georgia Southern’s Expertise Search. In this poster presentation, attendees can expect a visual representation of how metadata connects to the multiple platforms as well as further explanations of the relationships between the structures. Our initial goal of reusing metadata is to increase productivity through streamlining workflows. Our long-term goal is to garner faculty interest in the services of our institutional repository and related research platforms. As more and more research platforms become available to libraries, learning how to reuse metadata helps us to connect them strategically with the faculty’s and institution’s needs in mind.

Speakers
avatar for Ashley Lowery

Ashley Lowery

Digital Collections Specialist, Georgia Southern University
Ashley D. Lowery is the Digital Collections Specialist at Georgia Southern University. In this position, she manages the institutional repository, Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. This includes overseeing SelectedWorks author profiles, peer-reviewed journal and conference sites... Read More →



Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

A Library Challenge – Managing Institutional Library Subscriptions under the Budget Cuts
Many libraries suffer from budget cuts and exchange rate fluctuations. They can optimize their (usage-base) subscriptions using the journal access statistics from their organization. Such statistics is usually provided by publishers in a COUNTER-compliant format, which only includes total access numbers without revealing access patterns and internal details, such as access filtering. NIMS Library uses a proxy server to access e-journals, which logs all HTTP requests to journal websites. If we can map URLs in the log files to journals then we can compare them with the COUNTER-based statistics and obtain more accurate and detailed usage reports. For this purpose, we have developed an access log analyzer, which includes mapping rules from URLs to journals and can be tuned by the librarians. In this survey, we will show the following:
- How this log analyzer and mapping function work
- How we can distinguish accesses to the full text, abstract and supplementary content from access logs
- How we integrate the log analyzer to other library systems such as ERMS
- How we analyze access to journals from different publishers
- Difficulties in creating and updating mapping rules per publisher
- The differences between the COUNTER-based usage statics and actual access numbers

Speakers
avatar for Kosuke Tanabe

Kosuke Tanabe

Senior Engineer, National Institute for Materials Science
MT

Minoru Tanabe

President, MMtwins Co., Ltd.
avatar for Mikiko Tanifuji

Mikiko Tanifuji

Manager, National Institute for Materials Science
I am a publisher and library manager. My expertize are publishing journals and ebooks, and also institutional repository as a digital archive and developing derivative information services, such as a Researchers Directory Service (http://samurai.nims.go.jp). In my mind, all of these... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Collaborative Collection Development: Engaging Liaisons & Sharing Information
Librarians at the Bailey/Howe Library of the University of Vermont found themselves in an entirely new, if not unique, situation. Facing nearly unprecedented budget reductions and a liaison program bent towards research consultations and information literacy instruction (and not collection development), Bailey/Howe librarians embraced a spirit of collaboration and information sharing by developing a new evaluation and input-gathering project to engage liaisons and make more informed renewal and cancellation decisions.

The collection development librarian worked closely with the liaison program director to educate liaisons, in collections topics such as database usage statistics and subscription pricing, and design an evaluation project targeting the library’s electronic resources. The project goal was to holistically gather liaison feedback for improved decision-making and identify potential cancellation candidates in a cooperative manner, but provided an added opportunity for bridge-building between library departments.

Although budget reductions are an unfortunate, yet common, reality in most academic libraries, the approach taken by Bailey/Howe librarians laid a foundation for collaborative collection development and liaison engagement. This session will describe that approach and how it shaped the entire project. The presenter will outline her process of educating and sharing information with liaisons, and using evaluation criteria as part of a ranking system to gather feedback. Attendees can expect to get ideas for their own collection evaluation and learn one way to include liaisons in the process. Audience members will be encouraged to participate during the Q&A section and share local methods used to achieve similar goals.

Speakers
avatar for Alana Verminski

Alana Verminski

Collection Development Librarian, University of Vermont Libraries
Alana Verminski is the collection development librarian at the Bailey/Howe Library at the University of Vermont. Prior to joining UVM Libraries, she participated in the management of e-resources and discovery at St. Mary's College of Maryland Library. She coauthored Fundamentals... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Future of Textbooks and Course Reserves in Academic Libraries: An Evolving Role and Emerging Opportunity
With the rising costs of textbooks, their affordability and accessibility in college and university campuses has emerged as a major financial obstacle for students. This challenge presents an opportunity for academic and research libraries in providing access to textbooks quickly without further straining student financial resources. Textbooks and purchases for course reserves have traditionally been excluded from the majority of academic and research libraries collection development policies. Encouraging libraries' to re-evaluate and re-strategize their traditional approach to textbook purchasing and course reserves is critical. Embracing more textbooks and expanding the course reserves has the potential to significantly improve users services in learning and teaching across campuses. Ultimately this evolving role for academic libraries provides another opportunity to demonstrate their value to campus administration and communities.

The poster will provide a textual analysis of randomly selected ARL and ACRL member collection development policies regarding textbook purchasing and course reserves practices. Using the UCLA Powell Library as an example, the poster will show the Library ‘s campus wide support of course reserve purchasing for print and electronic materials. The presentation will also include an assessment of course reserve data in a single academic quarter as follows - total courses offered on campus, the number of courses serviced by the library’s course reserves operation, total number of titles purchased, and the circulation statistics. Lastly the quality of user services for the course reserve system will be analyzed from order to receipt by Access Services in the library.

Speakers
OC

Osman Celik

International Acquisitions Coordinator, Gifts & Exchange Section Head, The UCLA Library
RP

Roxanne Peck

Scholarly Communication and Licensing Librarian, UCLA


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Location, Location, Location: Using Government Information to Explore Charleston and Discover Multidisciplinary Research Outcomes
South Carolina’s iconic city, Charleston, is a place rich in culture and tradition. From its seaport setting to its striking architecture, Charleston is a uniquely interesting destination worth exploring. Using government information resources, this poster will highlight key elements of Charleston’s evolution from its earliest days to the present. The session will provide insight into history, demographics, civil engineering, industry, weather, the arts —and much more—to demonstrate the value of U.S. government publications for examining the legacy of a single city in the context of the transformation of the U.S. from a new nation to the world power it is today.

Expand your understanding of the importance of Charleston in U.S. naval, political, and economic history. Hear the opinions of the citizens of Charleston on a variety of government policy issues from the early 19th century to modern times. A study of Charleston that includes historic and current perspectives can describe changes in such things as agricultural practices and outcomes, harbor improvement, and response to natural disasters. Showcasing government information resources, this poster will highlight architecture in and around the city and will use historic maps to indicate fortifications and the locations of other significant structures at different times. It will not only provide insight into Charleston but also offer tips for using government information to research other U.S. localities, states, and regions, past to present.

Speakers
avatar for Catherine Johnson

Catherine Johnson

Product Manager-Lead, ProQuest
As Product Manager Lead at ProQuest, Catherine Johnson is responsible for ProQuest Congressional products. Catherine brings expertise and industry knowledge to her current role at ProQuest as the former Director of Market Planning for academic market legislative and historic services... Read More →
MR

Marianne Ryan

Associate University Librarian, User Strategies, Northwestern University Libraries


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Measuring and Sustaining the Impact of Area Studies Collections in a Research Library
Though much as been written about cooperative collection development and area studies collections, little research exists that assesses the effectiveness of these programs or their impact beyond their home institution. In the area studies, developing collections and sharing resources is the norm. Items in these collections are often scarcely held or “hidden” due to lack of specialized knowledge and financial resources required to maintain them. Such collections require highly trained personnel with the ability to work with one or more vernacular languages and knowledge of the publishing landscape in different geographic locales.. To ensure access to these unique but important collections, area specialists and research libraries developed innovative resource sharing and cooperative collection development schemes in order to provide continued access to materials. 

This poster will examine the recent lending history of developed area studies collections in order to evaluate the impact of resource sharing and cooperative collection development. By examining five years’ of a major research library’s resource sharing data for outgoing materials in Less Commonly Taught Languages (LCTL) and outgoing materials published with a foreign imprint, the authors will seek to draw conclusions about a cooperatively stewarded collection and make recommendations about the directions that research libraries should pursue in order to provide service at a regional and/or national level.

Speakers
EC

Esra Coskun

Collections Analysis and Planning Specialist, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign
avatar for Mara Thacker

Mara Thacker

South Asian Studies Librarian, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
Mara Thacker is the South Asian Studies and Global Popular Culture Librarian at the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign. As an associate professor, she has cultivated a research agenda on trends in area studies librarianship with a focus on distinctive collections, and public... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Review in Motion: Multi-Year Electronic Resources Review at UTA Libraries
With a flat budget and ever increasing inflation for serials, UTA Libraries chose to embark on a multi-year electronic resources review process. Targeting low hanging fruits, the first step was to review subscription journals included in aggregator databases. This initial review process was also a relatively straightforward step to help new liaisons in a newly created Outreach & Scholarship department to get their “feet wet” with collection development. As liaisons become more acclimated, the second step in the following year is to review all subscription journals. Online only subscriptions are distributed amongst all liaisons, while Print + Online subscriptions are handled by more seasoned liaisons. Guidelines and metrics are created to facilitate the review in addition to liaisons’ empirical knowledge through their engagement with users. The third step is to review all databases and sustain a regular database review interval going forward. In the presentation, we will share with you our findings, guidelines, and metrics of the process.

Speakers
avatar for Peter Zhang

Peter Zhang

Associate University Librarian, Discovery & Technology, University of Texas at Arlington
Associate University Librarian, Discovery & Technology at the University of Texas at Arlington Libraries. 
avatar for Ashley Zmau

Ashley Zmau

Serials Cataloging and Metadata Librarian, Dallas County Community College District
Ashley is the Serials Cataloging and Metadata Librarian for the Dallas County Community College District. She is the co-author of Electronic Resources Librarianship a Practical Guide for Librarians and the forthcoming Electronic Resources Troubleshooting. Previously, Ashley was the... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Rowan University Libraries Fights Cybercrime
Vendors occasionally notify university libraries when they observe suspicious downloads. This most often means that a university account has been hacked and shared with cyber-criminals who systematically download large amounts of licensed content from library databases. The vendors ask the library to investigate and invariably the hacked account appears in the logs hundreds of thousands of times from different IP addresses simultaneously. Rowan University Libraries decided not to wait for vendors to contact us. We have automated the identification and reporting of hacked accounts through the use of a locally developed PERL script that runs on a daily basis.

Speakers
avatar for Christine Davidian

Christine Davidian

Electronic Resources & Serials Librarian, Rowan University
avatar for Jonathan Jiras

Jonathan Jiras

Technology Services Librarian, Rowan University Libraries


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

The Excavation of Archaeological Grey Literature
Social scientists often produce grey literature for research sharing, in addition to more formally recognized publication outlets. Grey literature is defined as “that which is produced on all levels of government, academics, business and industry in print and electronic formats, but which is not controlled by commercial publishers.”[1] Although ubiquitous among the social science disciplines, grey literature is a challenge for librarians due to inconsistent bibliographic control and access practices.

Grey literature is particularly prevalent in archaeology. The case of the National Archaeological Database’s Reports collection – once home to an extensive index of archaeological grey literature, but now discontinued – reflects the need for librarians to keep abreast of continually evolving grey literature sources.

Speakers
avatar for Andrew R. Grissom

Andrew R. Grissom

Student, University of Tennessee, Knoxville
Andrew R. Grissom is the Circulation Supervisor at Rhodes College and a graduate student at the University of Tennessee, Knoxville's School of Information Sciences.


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Training a New Librarian in the What, How, Where, and Why of Health Sciences Collection Management
Collection management for the health sciences, particularly clinical medicine, is an increasingly complex job which, anecdotally, is usually given to experienced librarians. Health sciences libraries tend to delegate collections responsibilities to one librarian who holds all of the institutional collections knowledge. Replacing these people as they retire or move on could be difficult unless new librarians become trained in collections work. At the Michigan State University Libraries, recent search committee experience revealed that an entry-level health sciences collections position attracted fewer applicants than entry-level health sciences positions for instruction, liaison, or educational technology. This may reflect the focus of library school curricula as even applicants for the collections position generally had very little relevant exposure to the subject in library school or internships. Health sciences librarianship in general can involve a lot of on-the-job training, but supervisors hiring new librarians for collections may find themselves starting from scratch. This poster will demonstrate a detailed training program developed to teach a newly graduated librarian how to develop and manage an extensive clinical medicine collection at a large university library serving medical schools. The step-wise approach focuses on learning by doing, moving from the specific to general principles rather than the other way around. Decision making for selection of materials is approached from multiple angles: institutional analysis, subject analysis, and publisher and vendor knowledge. The new librarian will provide insight into which parts of the training were most helpful.

Speakers
avatar for Susan Kendall

Susan Kendall

Academic Liaison Librarian/Government Publications, San Jose State University
Sue is the coordinator for government publications and liaison to the College of Education.  Research interests include use of electronic government publication, patron driven acquisitions, and affordable learning solutions for students.  Sue has been at San José State since 2000... Read More →
avatar for Mari Monosoff-Richards

Mari Monosoff-Richards

Health Sciences Librarian, Michigan State University


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Two Ways of Performing Circulation Analysis: Comparing In-house Methods with OCLC Collection Evaluation
The University of Alaska Southeast Egan Library has been analyzing circulation data for several years using reports from the Sirsi-Dynix ILS and freely available online tag cloud generating tools. Librarians use these tools to produce lists of most highly circulating items and subjects. These lists are used to guide collection development. In 2015, the library purchased a subscription to OCLC’s Collection Evaluation tool. The library does not use any other OCLC Worldshare Management Services. The library uploaded circulation data into OCLC Collection Evaluation and created reports available in that system. This poster session will compare the type of reports generated using locally-created methods with the reports generated using OCLC Collection Evaluation and look how each can contribute to effective collection assessment, collection development, and weeding.

Speakers
avatar for Caroline Hassler

Caroline Hassler

Technical Services Librarian, University of Alaska Southeast



Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:00pm EST

Weeding Fast & Slow: Trying to Solve Both Immediate and Ongoing Concerns
After a long period without a systematic approach to weeding, we found ourselves with more books than space. To complicate matters further, we were also facing the possibility that we’d be losing shelving units within the next several years. In order to try and find a way forward, a weeding task force was created, including members from Collections, Metadata, Access Services and Reference & Instruction. The task force did a pilot with two liaison librarians, which involved a targeted review of older items with no recent circulation history. This approach seemed to work well so the process was rolled to all liaison librarians. While we have encountered some complications, we’ve been very pleased with how our librarians have embraced this process. This poster will outline the data we collected to inform our process, the logistical concerns we encountered and how we plan to try to make weeding an annual process rather than a project driven event. Attendees will learn about different strategies that they may wish to employ, and complications that may emerge, when implementing a new approach to weeding.

Speakers
avatar for Amelia Brunskill

Amelia Brunskill

Coordinator of Collections & Scholarly Resources, DePaul University
Amelia Brunskill is the Coordinator of Collections & Scholarly Resources at DePaul University. She was previously DePaul's Electronic Resources Librarian and prior to that she was the Liaison Librarian for the Sciences at Dickinson College, in Carlisle, PA. She received her MSIS from... Read More →


Friday November 6, 2015 6:00pm - 6:45pm EST
Grand Cypress Ballroom, Courtyard Marriott

6:30pm EST

Friday Night Dine Arounds
RSVP details coming soon. Get together and dine with colleagues at one of Charleston's finest restaurants. Choose between several cuisines, each tantalizing your palate with local, fresh ingredients served in a unique way. Discuss conference topics that intrigued you, get together with old friends, form new friendships with other librarians, or just relax and enjoy a great meal after a thought provoking conference week.

Meet in Francis Marion Lobby at 6:30 pm, depart with your group at 6:45 pm to walk to the restaurant together.

Friday November 6, 2015 6:30pm - 9:00pm EST
Lobby, Francis Marion Hotel

7:00pm EST

Ghostly Stroll Walking Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

Broad Street Tours will be offering walking tours again this year.  Lee Ann Bain and Carol Ezell-Gilson will be your guides.  

Charleston is believed to be a most haunted place. The city has experienced numerous natural and manmade disasters in its long history; stories and legends of great fear, suffering, and death abound. The historic district with hundreds of old buildings provides familiar settings for spirits to revisit and haunt. Charleston, called the “Holy City”, is known for its beautiful historic churches – whose graveyards hold many secrets and horrors. Beguiling tales will take you back to a time when life was tenuous, survival uncertain. Come hear legends from the past and take in the beautiful ambiance of Charleston at night. (1 1/2 hour tour)

For more information on all tours check out http://broadstreetbiz.com/walking-tours/charleston-conference-2015/.  Tours are $20.00 per person and payment may be made with cash or check at tour time.  Reservations are required as tour groups are limited to 20 people.

Friday November 6, 2015 7:00pm - 8:30pm EST
TBA
 
Saturday, November 7
 

7:30am EST

Breakfast Buffet

Biscuits! Get your biscuits, here! Plan on getting some grub and going over to the Performance Hall to get information on the latest, most innovative products on the market at the Charleston Premiers.


Saturday November 7, 2015 7:30am - 8:30am EST
Outside Grand Ballroom, Gaillard Center

8:00am EST

Charleston Premiers and Breakfast Buffet
Five Minute Previews of the New and Noteworthy!

These sessions are designed to offer publishers and vendors the chance to showcase their newest and most innovative products, platforms, and/or content. Speakers will be organized in a “lightning round” format with 15 companies, each allotted 5 minute presentations, back-to-back. We’ll have a breakfast buffet available, so plan on getting some grub and getting information on the latest, most innovative products on the market.
A list of participating companies for 2015 will be posted following the application deadline in September.

Saturday November 7, 2015 8:00am - 9:30am EST
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

9:45am EST

How Do We Study Satisfaction with Academic eBook Collections?
Much of the existing literature on patron satisfaction with eBooks in academic settings does not differentiate between platforms, formats, and other conditions that drastically change the user’s ability to read, annotate, and use eBook content. The Charlotte Initiative is a project funded by the Mellon Foundation to convene a working group that investigates principles for permanent acquisition of eBooks for academic libraries. As part of this project, a user experience research team has been created to review the existing literature on patron satisfaction with multiple aspects of eBooks. During summer 2015, this research team began a meta-study to determine areas of the user experience with eBooks in academic libraries that have been studied comprehensively and to identify areas that have not received formal evaluation.

Speakers
avatar for Alison Bradley

Alison Bradley

Director, Strategic Initiatives, PALCI
avatar for Beth Caruso

Beth Caruso

Technology Services Coordinator, Atkins Library, UNC Charlotte
Beth Caruso is from New Orleans, but currently lives in Charlotte, NC. After she graduated with her MA in English, she taught writing at the college level and was the Associate Director of the UNC Charlotte Writing Resources Center. She graduated with her MLIS in May of 2017, and... Read More →



Saturday November 7, 2015 9:45am - 10:30am EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

9:45am EST

New Platforms and Discovery Tools: Towards 21st Century University Presses and Libraries
This session will introduce two Mellon Foundation-funded projects designed to break new ground in the discoverability and linking of humanities texts and to create iterative editions of scholarly works that will evolve alongside the scholarship itself. Panelists will announce the UPScope Project, a university press-wide discovery engine based on natural language searches being developed in conjunction with the Association of American University Presses. The goal is for the bulk of university press content to be discoverable (with various options for access, purchase, and more) in one place. Since the system will be built on a natural language search, the platform will link humanities texts across disciplines in ways not before available and facilitate a richer and more meaningful research experience. The project lead for the University of Minnesota/CUNY's GC Digital Scholarship Lab’s Manifold Scholarship will also detail their project’s vision for digital scholarly works that move beyond the static replication of the print book. From the beginning, the scholarship will be dynamic, revised, and expanded to reflect the evolution of academic thought and research, incorporating access to primary research documents and data, links to related archives, rich media, social media, and reading tools.

Helen Cullyer from the Mellon Foundation and two librarians will respond to the vision of these projects and discuss how such initiatives can evolve in order to be most useful to students, scholars, and libraries. The panelists will participate in a lively conversation about how these initiatives will develop important research/discoverability/resources for faculty and what factors are involved in building shared value between university presses, campuses, and libraries as we build meaningful initiatives for a 21st century university.

Moderators
LS

Leila Salisbury

Director, University Press of Mississippi
Leila W. Salisbury has been the director of the University Press of Mississippi (UPM) since 2008. Prior to her appointment, she was marketing director of the University Press of Kentucky. At UPM, she is responsible for the overall direction and management of the scholarly publishing... Read More →

Speakers
HC

Helen Cullyer

Program Officer in Scholarly Communications, Mellon Foundation
Helen Cullyer is program officer in the Scholarly Communications Program of The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation  She works closely with Senior Program Officer Donald J. Waters on developing new grantmaking initiatives and reviewing grant proposals in the areas of scholarly publication... Read More →
avatar for Susan Doerr

Susan Doerr

Associate Director, University of Minnesota Press
Susan Doerr, the Associate Director at the University of Minnesota Press, is a twenty-two year publishing veteran with experience in literary, corporate, and scholarly publishing and distribution. Susan manages the Manifold Scholarship (www.manifoldapp.org) partnership with the CUNY... Read More →
EF

Ellen Faran

Director Emerita of the MIT Press, Project Manager, UPScope
Ellen W. Faran recently retired as Director of the MIT Press and now does consulting work in publishing. She has over forty years’ experience in trade, professional and scholarly publishing; her previous employers include Houghton Mifflin; Farrar, Straus & Giroux; HarperCollins... Read More →


Saturday November 7, 2015 9:45am - 10:30am EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

9:45am EST

Summon, EBSCO Discovery Service, and Google Scholar: Comparing Search Performance Using User Queries
When the NCSU Libraries initially subscribed to the Summon Discovery Service in 2009, there were few other competitors on the market and none offered an API interface that could be used to populate the Articles portion of our QuickSearch application (http://search.lib.ncsu.edu/). Since then, EBSCO Discovery Service (EDS) has emerged as a viable competitor. Using a random sample of actual user searches and bootstrap randomization tests, the NCSU Libraries’ Web-Scale Discovery Product Team conducted a study to compare the search performance of Summon, EDS and Google Scholar.

This session will discuss both the study methods and the results. Attendees will learn about methods that they could apply at their own institutions as well as how the Summon, EDS and Google Scholar fared in the comparison.

Speakers
avatar for John Vickery

John Vickery

Analytics Coordinator and Collections & Research Librarian for Social Sciences, NCSU Libraries
I'm interested in applying analytical methods to library data for better organization in matters such as collections and service optimization. I like to program in Python, SAS and R.



Saturday November 7, 2015 9:45am - 10:30am EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

10:45am EST

2PDA: Collection Development Hybrid
Academic libraries have been challenged over the past decade to acquire resources to meet the curricular and research needs of its students and faculty with flat or decreasing materials budgets. At the same time, libraries have seen persistent and troubling low levels of use for some of these resources, particularly monographs. Simultaneously, academic libraries such as IUPUI are also requiring that librarians use their time and skills in new ways of outreach to faculty and students—new ways that de-emphasize the traditional role of librarian as collection developer and manager.
2PDA is a hybrid approach to collection development that includes both professional-driven and patron-driven acquisitions. It is a mixture of traditional title by title selection, subject-based approval plans along with subject and format-driven patron driven acquisitions. This session will outline the four-year effort at IUPUI University Library to craft a collection development plan that balanced these factors while maintaining a high-quality collection of resources. This session will discuss what the library has learned about its users and how they use the collection and how this approach has been fine-tuned. This session will also discuss how the library anticipates its approach will change over the next two years.

Speakers
KP

Kevin Petsche

Head of Resource Acquisition, IUPUI


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Cooper Room, Courtyard Marriott

10:45am EST

A New Kind of Social Media Strategy: Collecting Zines at the Vassar College Library
“Where do we go from here?” One way that the Vassar College Library is answering this question is by making concerted efforts to promote unique or rarely held materials—that is, nurturing collections that will make us stand out from the crowd. With that goal in mind, the Vassar College Library has spent the past year working to create a collection of zines.

This session will discuss the importance of social media in the acquisition of zines, using the Vassar College Library’s experience as an example. Zines are DIY, self-published materials that are a vibrant and creative way to represent diverse points of view in your collection; however, with DIY publications come a host of new collection development and acquisition hurdles to consider. Since zines are produced outside of the purview of for-profit publishers, librarians cannot rely on our comfortable and well-established mechanisms to explore and acquire these materials. Using social media to inform collection development can be daunting, but if zines are a medium your library wants to pursue, doing a little bit of networking can go a long way.

Participants will learn about the Vassar zine collection development plan, and different ways that we use social media (particularly Tumblr and Twitter) to fulfill our mission. Different online zine distributors (or distros) will also be discussed, as well as the wealth of materials to be found from individual zinesters via avenues typically not utilized by libraries, such as Etsy. The topic of ethical zine acquisitions will also be explored.

Speakers
avatar for Heidy Berthoud

Heidy Berthoud

Head of Technical Services Technical Services, Vassar College
Acquisitions, cataloging, zines, and Russian studies. Frequent lurker on #critlib, #mashcat, and #radlib. Cat enthusiast.


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

10:45am EST

Changing the Conversation: Using Agile Approaches to Develop and Assess Collections Holistically
In 2013-14, James Madison University Libraries embarked on an endeavor to create a flexible, holistic model for developing, managing, and assessing collections. We began by focusing on qualitative and quantitative data to inform big-picture questions about whether collections were meeting evolving campus needs. The investigation also included an in-depth literature review, the launch of several pilot projects, and the construction of an evaluation rubric that encompasses all collections. Over the past two years a structured implementation has incorporated: the collapsing of siloed funds to allow collaborative selection across interdisciplinary fields; a revision of allocation models to reflect changing curricular needs; and a campus-wide continuing-resources review. Incorporating contemporary as well as traditional content development methods in this process was key, including consortial DDA programs, device-lending, curation of local digital collections, and hosting of campus research and open-access publications. Additionally, visually compelling collection “snapshots” were adopted, tailored to the needs of specific disciplines, to support subject librarians and faculty in understanding the scope, makeup, and use of collections in all formats. These combined efforts have culminated in a flexible collections assessment rubric, which analyzes and measures the “temperature” of the entirety of the collections. This rubric can be tailored by purpose, including specific needs of a discipline, evaluator, or audience. The result is a mechanism that enables the expression of a holistic value of collections to constituents, from administrators to faculty and students. JMU’s Director of Collections and Director of Acquisitions & Cataloging will share the journey and results of this project.

Speakers
avatar for Cheri Duncan

Cheri Duncan

Director of Scholarly Resources & Discovery, James Madison University
Cheri Jeanette Duncan is the Director of Scholarly Resources & Discovery at the James Madison University and a frequent presenter at professional conferences. For over 24 years, she has served in various positions and leadership roles within JMU Libraries, ranging from cataloging... Read More →
avatar for Genya O'Gara

Genya O'Gara

VIVA Deputy Director, George Mason University
Genya O’Gara is the Associate Director of VIVA, the academic library consortium of Virginia, which represents 72 higher education institutions within the Commonwealth. She received her MSLS from UNC-Chapel Hill, and her BA from the Evergreen State College.


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

10:45am EST

Cost Per User: Analyzing EZProxy Logs for Collection Development
Cost per use has long been a staple of collection development decision making for electronic resources, but what of the users behind those retrieval and search counts? Questions about how interdisciplinary usage of a database is, how deeply integrated it is into a given program or course, and who will miss it if it is cancelled are generally relegated to the realm of anecdotal evidence. In this session a librarian from Nevada State College will present on efforts to remedy this gap in knowledge by analyzing EZProxy logs, which can be set up to capture unique user identifiers at the point of authentication into library electronic resources. This data can be matched with institutional data about those users to run analyses such as cost per user, percent of users within the institution as a whole or a specific department, and frequency and depth of use for the average user. They can also be matched with other institutional data factors to determine things like if library users have higher GPAs or make better grades on research assignments. In this session attendees will learn about the types of questions that can be answered with EZProxy log analysis. Assumptions about electronic resource use will be questioned, followed by real time interaction with Nevada State College’s library use dashboard to discover the answers from the Library’s first year of data collection. http://tabsoft.co/1EqMsBy


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

10:45am EST

Data Mining at Scale(s): Collaborating to Build Sharable Skill Sets and Data Sets
Data mining methods enable researchers to recognize patterns within a mass of texts, but the same methods can also offer a more targeted glimpse on a smaller scale. As text and data mining become further embedded in contemporary research practices, navigating and mapping out the process will become increasingly vital. This session will offer an overview of the licensing, commercial, and research-oriented lessons learned during a collaborative data mining pilot conducted between Syracuse University Libraries and ProQuest.

The pilot project at Syracuse University mobilized a range of teams at both organizations to facilitate data mining research centered on a question best answered though keen attention to one historical periodical’s presentation of a single specific type of information over time. During the course of this partnership, both Syracuse University Libraries and ProQuest encountered a range of questions surrounding content rights, internal workflow processes, data distribution models, and data mining skill sets.

The panel of presenters will share their first-hand experience and discuss how they worked together to address each road-block in order to help others learn to navigate some of the challenges and opportunities raised by the proliferation of data-driven research within the academy.

Speakers
DD

Doug Duhaime

Text and Data Mining Product Manager, ProQuest
avatar for Scott Warren

Scott Warren

Senior Associate Dean for Research Excellence, Syracuse University Libraries
avatar for Patrick Williams

Patrick Williams

Humanities Librarian, Lead for Digital & Open Scho, Syracuse University



Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Colonial Ballroom, Embassy Suites

10:45am EST

How Did We Get Here? Moving Your Collection Can be Easy.
This session will describe the process undertaken by the University of Tennessee at Chattanooga’s Library to move the entire library’s collection of 500,000+ items (monographs, micro-formats, AV, archives, rare books, objects, art, and technology) from a 3-story building to a brand new 5-story building with an entirely new shelving program and layout. The 2.5 year process involved librarians from Collection Services (electronic resources, acquisitions, stacks maintenance, special collections), Information Technology, and Library Administration. Working together, the main “Move” project was divided into dozens of smaller projects that could be completed within a semester or shorter time frame utilizing student labor. Each project built upon the previous project and allowed for continuous evaluation and the ability to change directions as the construction deadline changed or problems arose (like losing precious shelving square footage because of an error in the building plan). Examples of projects to be discussed are weeding, interfiling, inventory, statistical analysis, and space management. Focus will be placed on effectively managing stacks/collection projects while in a state of flux, tips for accurately assessing collection size and space needs, and tips for selecting the best library movers. Participants will gain valuable and practical tips for evaluating and managing small or large collection moves. In the end, our move was a success. It was quick and accurate; taking only 10 days to accomplish during a break. We were up and fully operational in our new facility within 3 weeks.

Speakers
avatar for Katie Gohn

Katie Gohn

Head, Collection Services, University of Tennessee at Chattanooga


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

10:45am EST

Innovation Sessions
Individual titles and descriptions coming soon.

Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
TBA

10:45am EST

Multiplying by Division: Mapping the Collection at University of North Texas Libraries
The University of North Texas (UNT) Libraries has developed a unique collection assessment tool, the Collection Map, to provide support for a new access-based collection development philosophy. UNT Librarians realized the limitations of traditional assessment methods to gauge the impact of emerging acquisitions models such as DDA and large interdisciplinary ebook collections. What was needed was a flexible, nimble assessment system to track access, holdings, and ILL activity for each academic discipline. The Collection Map is a database that links items, and their associated data, to any one of several dozen overlapping sub-collections via Library of Congress call numbers. The Collection Map’s unique many-to-many relationship of sub-collections to items and data enables librarians to demonstrate support for subject areas and to make more informed collecting decisions. This session will describe the components and creation of the Collection Map, including manipulation of existing systems to extract data. The speakers will show how the Collection Map is being used to support collection development activities, describe some challenges with its implementation, and share plans for improving the system. Attendees will learn about the challenges inherent in creating new assessment tools to support emerging collection types. Audience members will be encouraged to share ideas and experiences with building assessment tools and systems.

Speakers
avatar for Laurel Sammonds Crawford, MLIS

Laurel Sammonds Crawford, MLIS

Head of Collection Development, University of North Texas Libraries
Laurel has a BS in Zoology and earned her MLIS from Louisiana State University. Her research interests include collection analysis, electronic resource use and delivery, and library leadership.


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

10:45am EST

One Library’s Successful Venture in Providing Comprehensive Streaming Media Services
Thoroughly understanding what professors and instructors needed to accomplish their teaching goals with streaming video was the first step enabling one academic library to successfully manage a rapid increase in demand for streaming media. The second element was incorporating an expert understanding of copyright law and the nature of the video marketplace.
This session will strive to educate librarians and other professional library staff on how they can best integrate media streaming into mainstream library services for their campus faculty, as well as how to provide a full range of streaming services. Session also will address workflow, communication with faculty, budget and license negotiations, copyright principles, fair use, and content delivery. Audience participation will be encouraged, and time will be reserved for questions.

Speakers
avatar for Mary Ann James

Mary Ann James

Electronic Resources Manager, Marriott Library, University of Utah
Mary Ann has worked in academic and public libraries for over 25 years, most of that time in Collection Development. She currently manages electronic resources at the J. Willard Marriott Library which includes databases, ejournals, ebooks and media streaming databases.
avatar for Allyson Mower

Allyson Mower

Scholarly Communications & Copyright Librarian, University of Utah
Marriott Library, University of Utah



Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Laurens Room, Francis Marion Hotel

10:45am EST

Rapid Collections Surveying with Book Traces @ U.Va.
Many donated books in circulating collections have value as historical artifacts due to unique interventions by their former owners, such as marginalia, inscriptions, and inserts (see booktraces.org for examples). These interventions can potentially offer a trove of evidence of how books have been consumed across time and what they meant to past cultures, but are generally undocumented and therefore undiscoverable through library catalogs. Moreover, as circulating copies, these books may be vulnerable to damage, loss, and withdrawal. Book Traces @ U.Va. is a two-year effort to survey pre-1923 books in the University of Virginia circulating collection for uniquely modified volumes and enhance our catalog to make them more readily discoverable. Because our target population is large—up to 180,000 volumes—we are developing techniques for rapidly sampling the collection through a randomized, statistically representative selection from each call number subclass. We believe our statistical samples will point the way for deeper exploration of subject areas where the books are especially rich in evidence of historical readership, and in this session we will present our preliminary findings as well as an overview of our survey and sampling techniques. Participants will take away a set of actionable ideas for surveying collections and enhancing metadata on a modest budget. Attendees will also hear about how considering non-rare books as historical artifacts may re-shape our approach to retention and off-site storage decisions.

Speakers
KJ

Kristin Jensen

Project Manager, University of Virginia Library
avatar for Carla Lee

Carla Lee

Interim Senior Director, Harrison-Small Research Center, University of Virginia


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

10:45am EST

Reconciling Ebook Packages at NCSU Libraries
As ebooks become an increasingly large part of our collection, the NCSU Libraries Acquisition and Discovery Department created an ebook reconciliation database to ensure that all of our purchased content is available in the ILS and throughout the Libraries discovery layers. This tool compares vendor title lists against ILS metadata in order to identify missing titles and generate reports.

The session will: discuss what prompted the development of the database; present the ebook data flow in NCSU Libraries and ebook reconciliation workflows designed based on the data flow; report on our approach on how to collect ebook title lists, normalize metadata and identify matching point for the reconciliation; present the most common ebooks issues found in the reconciliation process, discuss the causes and solutions for these issues; and analyze the issue data and identify patterns.

Attendees will learn how to design a similar tool and associated workflows in order to manage their own ebook collections.

Speakers
avatar for Christee  Pascale

Christee Pascale

Associate Head, NC State University Libraries
Christee Pascale is the Associate Head of Acquisitions and Discovery at North Carolina State University Libraries, where her responsibilities include leading the Monograph Unit staff of eight and overseeing the acquisition, licensing and cataloging for the Libraries $2 million dollar... Read More →
avatar for Xiaoyan Song

Xiaoyan Song

Electronic Resources Librarian, North Carolina State University Libraries
Xiaoyan Song is the Electronic Resource Librarian (ERL) at the Monograph Unit in the Acquisition and Discovery (A&D) department at NCSU Libraries. She mingles with all aspects of ebooks including acquisition, license negotiation, activation, ebook troubleshooting, and workflow mapping... Read More →



Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

10:45am EST

Sharing Scholarly Journal Articles through University Institutional Repositories using Publisher Supplied Data and Links
The University of Florida (UF) libraries and Elsevier are collaborating to widen access to articles authored or co-authored by UF authors and published by Elsevier. Both organizations are committed to supporting researcher success and believe working together will more effectively widen public access, improve compliance with current and future funder policies, and facilitate efficient and responsible sharing of scholarly journal articles through the university's institutional repository. This presentation will provide an overview and brief demonstration of how these services are becoming interoperable through a strategic alliance.

Smart linking from repository to publisher platform can help to:
• Maximize Research Impact – citation metrics and alt metrics are used to assess the impact of research so it is essential that these data are aggregated and shared, which is easier if the data are not fragmented across platforms
• Connect Researchers to the Best Available Version – dynamic ingest of publisher holdings information and metadata into university IR allows local management with delivery of the best (published) version, and also addresses the concern of some authors about reliance on a pre-publication manuscript for public access
• Realize Cost Savings and Efficiency – this collaboration provides an alternative to, but does not preclude, self-archiving; facilitates better compliance, impact tracking and reporting; increases the visibility of and access to the scholarship of UF authors; and establishes a new, and valued, library service to the campus and beyond, with minimal initial investment and low ongoing costs
• Ensure Reliability and Trustworthiness –access to errata and retraction information are ensured, maintaining article integrity

Speakers
BW

Ben Walker

Associate Dean Digital Services & Shared Collections, University of Florida
avatar for Alicia Wise

Alicia Wise

Director of Universal Access, Elsevier
Alicia is very passionate about expanding access to information, and particularly enjoys developing successful partnerships across complex stakeholder communities. Her areas of expertise lie at the intersection of copyright and digital technology. She joined Elsevier in June 2010... Read More →



Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

10:45am EST

The Books We Didn’t Buy: Assessing What We Don’t Have
Santa Clara University and the University of San Francisco are leveraging patron-initiated borrowing data to create a deeper and more browse-able collection in certain subject areas where patrons have shown interest. This same ILL data has also been used to strengthen the meta-collection of our consortium (LINK+) through the intentional and coordinated diversification of approval plan profiles. When we began looking at our patron-initiated borrowing data, we could see that there are call number ranges where one or both universities borrow frequently. We will discuss both methodology and preliminary findings: how this data is being gathered, analyzed, and then used on our campuses to inform collection development decisions. How can one library (or a few libraries) strengthen the meta-collection of a consortium – especially without needing the consensus of all member libraries?

Speakers
avatar for Erika L. Johnson

Erika L. Johnson

Associate Dean for Collection Services, University of San Francisco
As Associate Dean for Collection Services, my areas of responsibility include the E-Resources & Systems, Metadata & Collection Management, and Special Collections & University Archives departments, as well as oversight of the library budget. Before joining USF in 2014 as Head of Acquisitions... Read More →


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

10:45am EST

The Library’s Role in the Changing World of Textbooks: Where Do We Go From Here?
Examine the library’s role as options proliferate regarding textbooks in higher education- due to the high cost of textbooks- including librarians facilitating faculty selecting open educational resource textbooks, professors dropping textbooks and using primary source resources instead, libraries as publishers creating open educational resource textbooks, libraries purchasing and providing textbooks to students, including students whose financial aid has not come in, as part of Student success initiatives.
Objective: Review this range of options and consider their implications for libraries specifically for acquisitions, scholarly communications, student outreach, library as place. Consider open education resources, both as a financial boon to students, cost cutting measure for administration, or limit of intellectual content.
Ways to include audience: I’m interested to hear what audience members’ institutions are doing regarding textbooks and what they felt their options or responsibilities were
What attendees can expect to learn: Review of the new options regarding textbooks and their implications for libraries; my institution’s (UALR) and another neighboring institution’s experience (UCA) with purchasing textbooks and other options considered, consideration of the context of the UA system’s new online only university module “e-Versity” mandating that only open educational resource textbooks can be chosen by faculty for their courses.

Speakers
avatar for Emily  Ray

Emily Ray

Metadata and Discovery Services Librarian, Ottenheimer Library UALR



Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Grand Ballroom 1, Gaillard Center

10:45am EST

The New Collection Development: Planning and Assessment to Promote Innovation
We all know that library collections are in the midst of a radical transformation. Rapidly evolving technology, innovations in distributing and accessing content, new models of pricing, repurposing of library spaces and shrinking collections budgets create a new environment for collection development. This new environment requires that librarians participate in a variety of new collection development activities beyond just selecting content.

In the emerging library collection development landscape librarians must engage with the disciplinary content of collections as well as a range of other areas. New areas of responsibility might include:

• Information technology, including issues of personal data curation
• Copyright, open access and scholarly communication
• New modes for delivery of content
• Budgeting, development, fundraising and stewardship of resources
• Collections issues regarding space, preservation, curation and storage of collections in all formats
• Integrating collections issues into instruction, reference, readers’ advisory, programming and other engagement with the library’s users, funders and other stakeholders

These and other activities continue to take an increasing amount of time and effort on the part of collection development librarians. In many cases, however, librarians and library administrators are not adequately prepared to incorporate these activities into their portfolios. The audience will engage in a dialog about incorporating new and emerging collection development activities into training programs, strategic plans, work plans, and assessment activities. Attendees will leave with tools for incorporating innovation into their institutions’ operations.

Speakers


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

10:45am EST

The Next Step in Discovery Implementation: User-Centered Discovery System Redesign
This presentation will discuss a discovery system redesign project at the University of Houston Libraries, and in particular the Discovery Redesign Team’s collaborative, user-centered approach. Throughout the redesign process, the Team collected information about the needs and expectations of internal and external users regarding the Library’s discovery system. The team worked with two internal working groups to gather and evaluate the collected information. The results of this evaluation were used to make user-centered design decisions.

The Discovery Redesign Team worked with the Discovery Advisory Group, made up of library employees from various departments, to seek feedback and suggestions throughout the redesign process. Working collaboratively with this Group informed design decisions made by the Team while also generating buy-in for the discovery redesign.

The Team worked with the Discovery Usability Group to collect information from end-users to inform the Team’s design decisions. The Committee held focus groups with the Library Information Desk staff to learn how the discovery system was serving users, and where it was falling short; they conducted usability tests with students to find out where users were experiencing breakdowns while completing common tasks. The methodologies and findings of the Team’s various activities will be discussed in this presentation.

Changes to system interfaces affect both internal and external users. The University of Houston’s discovery system redesign is an example of a successful, user-centered, collaborative design project.

Speakers
avatar for Kelsey Brett

Kelsey Brett

Discovery Systems Librarian, University of Houston Libraries
Discovery Systems Librarian at the University of Houston
avatar for Richard Guajardo

Richard Guajardo

Richard Guajardo is Head of Resource Discovery Systems at the University of Houston. He provides oversight for electronic resources management, discovery tools, and the library services platform. He is currently on the 2017 NASIG Conference Planning Committee and is vice-chair of... Read More →



Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

10:45am EST

This Isn’t Your Slightly-Older Sister’s Library: Presenting an Innovative Approach for In-Library Experiences
The James Branch Cabell Library at Virginia Commonwealth University created a new model for providing in-library personalized services that only faintly resembles previous approaches of circulation, reference and media desks. By removing all laptop and much equipment circulation to automated kiosks and a vending machine, and after acknowledging that monograph circulation peaked several years ago and continues to decline, we’ve empowered and trained staff Information Associates to focus on the user’s experience and research needs, rather than on library functions. New position descriptions were created that demanded creative and analytical approaches for working with users as appropriate, and in-depth training on a operationalized READ (Reference Effort Assessment Data) scale allows for quick triage of user needs and on-demand scheduling of librarian consultations was provided. In addition to these significant changes in our in-library service model, we used the opportunity presented by a major building program to create a physical space for these services not yet seen in academic libraries. Gone is the monolithic service desk. Instead, we have created four small, single-staff kiosks that invites shoulder-to-shoulder collaboration between peers, rather than a face-to-face encounter. Attendees will learn about the urgent needs to re-imagine their service models in light of the automation options for inventory that hampers our ability to focus on the user’s experience and needs. Floorplans, mock-ups and drawings of our new service area and kiosks will be distributed.

Speakers
avatar for Dennis Clark

Dennis Clark

Associate University Librarian for Research and Learning, Virginia Commonwealth University
Service models for academic libraries


Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

10:45am EST

“Flip This House”: “Back of the House” Library Staff Engaging the Wider Campus Community
Traditionally “back of the house” staff are working exclusively behind the scenes to grow and support the collections of the library. Even the term itself indicates “back of the house” staff should remain behind the scenes, working on tasks that while important, are not easily identifiable to library users. Procuring and describing content for discoverability is as important now as it ever has been, but we suggest that a successful organization should expect more from these faculty and staff members. As technical skill sets become more in demand campus wide, the “back of the house” staff need to step to the front. This presentation will explore how two GVSU library departments typically considered “back of the house” have partnered with other entities on campus, providing services that otherwise be unavailable.
The objective of the session is to demonstrate a growing need for “back of the house” staff to contribute to outreach initiatives. Getting more widely involved has re-energized the staff, raised the libraries’ profile, and contributed to the libraries’ overall success. Attendees can expect to hear multiple examples, strategies on collaboration, and what ultimately is a call to action.

Speakers
avatar for Jeffrey Daniels

Jeffrey Daniels

Knowledge Infrastructure Strategist, Grand Valley State University
avatar for Patrick Roth

Patrick Roth

Department Head, Systems and Discovery, Grand Valley State University



Saturday November 7, 2015 10:45am - 11:15am EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

11:30am EST

Acquisitions Everywhere: Modeling an Acquisitions Data Standard to Connect a Distributed Environment
Acquisitions functions remain operationally crucial in providing access to paid information resources, but data formats and workflows utilized within library acquisitions remain centered on the traditional integrated library system (ILS). As libraries have evolved an environment of distributed systems to manage information resources, so too must acquisitions functions adapt to an environment that may include the ILS, e-resource management systems (ERMS), enterprise resource planning (ERP) systems, institutional repositories (IR) and other digital content management systems.

This presentation is intended to articulate a vision for applying standards-based practice—as already employed for resource description—to acquisitions functions in a variety of metadata schema and systems. Utilization of standards will be demonstrated in the proposal of a core acquisitions element set that can exist in any system, with proofs of concept including demonstration of the element set within MODS, JSON, and how it could be reflected within the ILS and ERMS.

Building on these proofs of concept in recording interoperable acquisitions data will be an explanation of possible applications, including an exploration of more robust support for Semantic Web technologies. In particular, this presentation will explore how this element set could utilize published linked data sets, such as the North Carolina State University Organization Name Linked Data and Global Open Knowledgebase (GOKb) linked data service, to provide more accurate and efficient identity management.

This program is intended to provoke interest and in-session involvement in developing an acquisitions data standard that can be used to support linked data applications for acquisitions functions.

Speakers
EH

Eric Hanson

Electronic Resources Librarian, North Carolina State University Libraries
PL

Paul Lightcap

Collection Strategist and Head of Acquisitions, Florida State University Libraries
avatar for Matthew R. Miguez

Matthew R. Miguez

Metadata Librarian, Florida State University
Matthew Miguez is the Metadata Librarian at Florida State University Libraries. In this position he manages the production and quality of metadata created for the FSU Digital Library and provides metadata expertise to the university community. His professional interests include digital... Read More →



Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Carolina Ballroom B, Francis Marion Hotel

11:30am EST

Analyzing Usage: Looking Beyond the Obvious
At the moment, there is no widely available way of knowing how readers are using an article on a product platform. But what if there were? A new class of analytics could help us look beyond simple numbers and usage data to make better product development and content acquisition decisions. In the competitive market of journal content or aggregated content for academic research, usage is the currency and we need to look beyond the content and into how people leverage the tools and features in our delivery platforms. This presentation will share insights from a yearlong usage analytics project between ProQuest and Squid Solutions. As we become more data-driven in decision-making, we need to recognize the challenges and opportunities of leveraging usage data to provide a better, more valuable products and services to users.

Session objective: Have the audience think differently about usage data.

Speakers
AL

Allan Lu

VP Platforms, ProQuest LLC
avatar for Pierre Montagano

Pierre Montagano

Business Development Director, Squid Solutions
Pierre Montagano is has over 15 years experience in publishing working with both commercial and non-commercial publishers including Pearson, McGraw-Hill and Cambridge University Press. He is currently with Squid Solutions as the director of business development working with customers... Read More →


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Grand Ballroom 3, Gaillard Center

11:30am EST

Collaborative Writing Technologies: Overleaf for Institutions
Overleaf is a cloud-based collaborative writing and reviewing tool developed by the team behind the popular WriteLaTeX editor. Overleaf is making science and research faster and more efficient by whole scientific process into one place, from idea to writing, to review, to publication. Overleaf’s rapidly growing service is already serving more than 200,000 authors worldwide, and is now supporting universities, libraries and research centers with Overleaf for Institutions.

John Hammersley will chronicle the creation and development of this award winning technology and its use within various institutional settings.

Helen Josephine will then discuss the Stanford-Overleaf institutional trial – why Stanford chose Overleaf, what the trial involves, and the response received from the staff and students who’ve been using Overleaf in 2015. Real world examples of how Overleaf has been used and embraced by researchers and institutions will be given. A Q&A session will allow the audience to join the discussion on how they're embracing collaborative and researcher technologies.

Moderators
Speakers
JH

John Hammersley

Co-Founder, CEO, Overleaf
avatar for Helen Josephine

Helen Josephine

Head of the Engineering Library, Stanford University
Helen Josephine is the Head Librarian at the Terman Engineering Library at Stanford University. She is the subject liaison and bibliographer for the School of Engineering departments of Aeronautics and Astronautics, Electrical Engineering, and Management Science and Engineering... Read More →


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

11:30am EST

Do-It-Yourself Title Overlap Comparisons
Many libraries are reconsidering their abstract&index database subscriptions in light of multidisciplinary tools like Google Scholar and customized discovery services. Others may be considering new index purchases and wondering if they're worth the money.  This presentation will demonstrate how UPEI uses Google Sheets and student workers to create useful comparison lists for collection decision making. Featured will be comparisons done on PAIS, Philosopher's Index, Historical Abstracts, and ASFA (Aquatic Sciences and Fisheries Abstracts) for cancellation consideration, and on women's studies and mechatronics engineering for consideration of new products. Emphasis will be placed on method and customization of results for your institution's needs. Some advanced spreadsheet tricks that also apply to Excel will be included.

Speakers
avatar for Melissa Belvadi

Melissa Belvadi

Collections & User Experience Librarian, Robertson Library
Melissa has been a librarian at UPEI since 2008. She previously worked for academic libraries in the US after getting her MLS from UCLA in 1993.


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Calhoun Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:30am EST

e-Book Adoption by Students Across the World: A Diffusion of Innovation Perspective
e-Books have emerged as an increasingly popular IT innovation in the academia. We apply Roger’s Diffusion of Innovation lens to analyze the adoption of e-Books by students across the world.

We selected 25 empirical studies focusing on the intention, decision, or process of adopting e-Books by students, which were published by top-tier LIS journals in the last 10 years. Our secondary analysis of the past research reveals: (1) the advantages experienced by the students for using e-Books over printed books, (2) the specific tasks for which they prefer using e-Books over printed books, (3) the way in which e-Books are compatible with the beliefs, experiences, and needs of the diverse student populations across the world, (4) the details of optional, mandatory, or collective adoption of e-Books by the students, (5) the role of communication channels in shaping their decision to adopt e-Books, (6) the role of academic settings in shaping their adoption of e-Books, (7) the influence of change agents on the adoption of e-Books by the students, and (8) the nature of promotional efforts enforced by the students’ academic settings and the way in which such efforts affect their decision to adopt e-Books.

This will be an interactive session. We will discuss each of the above 8 findings with the audience.

Based on the strengths and limitations of the 25 empirical studies, we provide guidelines for conducting e-Book adoption research with students from diverse backgrounds. Theoretical and practical implications will be discussed at the end.

Speakers
XB

Xiaopeng Bao

Graduate Assistant, University of Tennessee
avatar for Devendra Potnis

Devendra Potnis

Associate Professor, School of Information Sciences, University of Tennessee - Knoxville
My interdisciplinary research focuses on the application of information and communication technologies (e.g., e-Books, mobile apps, information systems, websites, etc.) for the development of society (including libraries), governments, and businesses. In particular, my research projects... Read More →



Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Cypress Ballroom South, Courtyard Marriott

11:30am EST

Face It, the New Academic Library is a Business: The Coming Corporate Evolution of Academic Libraries
While the corporate speak of "customers," "products," and "commodities" seems anathema to many librarians, this panel will make the case that the evolution of the academic library is a "corporate" one where the library thinks of itself as a commercial entity that provides goods and services in exchange for money (in terms of budget/funding).

Academic libraries have succeeded overwhelmingly in making their services seamless. embedded, and invisible -- so successful, in fact, that many administrators and users think the library actually provides less services than before (when stacks and work space were the measure of what library services provide).

Keeping the library relevant and on the leading edge of campus innovation necessitates a shift in thinking about WHAT the traditional "service" model means and how the library goes about achieving its mission. The reality is that many traditional library skills (like cataloging) could be considered "outsource-able," requiring information professionals to gain new, more "corporate" skills like marketing, negotiation, IT and systems administration, project management, and (god forbid) even sales.

What does this new corporate approach to academic libraries mean? Who is doing it? How is it succeeding? And where are its pain points? Where does it fail? Join academic librarians from a mix of public and private institutions as they describe how they're approaching this evolution and the it bodes for the future of academic libraries.

Speakers
avatar for Sara Rouhi

Sara Rouhi

Director of Engagement & Advocacy for Altmetric and Dimensions, Digital Science
Sara Rouhi is Director of Engagement & Advocacy for Dimensions with responsibility for education and outreach in the US and Canada for both Digital Science’s new Dimensions platform and Digital Science’s alternative metrics company, Altmetric. She... Read More →


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Carolina Ballroom A, Francis Marion Hotel

11:30am EST

Innovation Sessions
Individual titles and descriptions coming soon.

Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
TBA

11:30am EST

Levitating Libraries to the Clouds: A Strategy for Academic Libraries
The University of Notre Dame's Office of Information Technology is in the process of implementing their "Cloud First" strategy where it intends to move 80% of its core technical infrastructure into the cloud by the end of 2017, using a tiered prioritization structure starting from hosting (SaaS), AWS (IaaS) and on premise.  As a campus technology partner, the Hesburgh Libraries has begun planning for moving many of our services and infrastructure into the cloud. This initiative represents a radical shift in mindset for technology planning, moving from thinking about technology as assets that need replacement every 5 to 7 years to thinking about IT as a monthly utility.  This presentation will cover how the Hesburgh Libraries is devising our plan to move a significant amount of our infrastructure to the cloud and the phases we have outlined to meet the OIT's 3 year plan.  We will cover:

  • our experimentation in Amazon Web Services and how AWS differs from our current infrastructure  
  • the assessment of library service catalog, both in terms of function and usage  
  • our determination of which hosting model meets the needs of our services (SaaS, PaaS, IaaS, or On-Premises)
  • how we will budget for the move  
  • planning for the migration and roll out  
  • and any other considerations libraries may need to evaluate in this process.

Speakers
avatar for Mark Dehmlow

Mark Dehmlow

AUL, Digital Strategies and Technology, University of Notre Dame



Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

11:30am EST

LibX 10 Years of Embedding Library Resources into Users' Webflows
LibX was developed as a browser plug-in ten years ago. Since that time we've received awards, grants, and the gratitude of researchers and librarians alike. Come hear the story of how this open source technology was created, developed , and maintained for a decade. Learn how embedding the library directly into the researcher's webflow continues to be an effective way to impact the success of anyone with information needs. Examine what we're working on today and gain creative new ideas of what you can present to your users at the point of need.

Speakers
AB

Annette Bailey

Assistant Director for Electronic Resources and Emerging Technology Services, Virginia Tech


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Salon 2, Gaillard Center

11:30am EST

Publishing Makerspace: A Collaborative Approach to Multimodal Publishing
Publishing Makerspace is a project that seeks to engage collaboratively with publication workflows from the research design phase to final products. It employs an approach to publishing that reimagines and retools publishing models. We are developing a replicable workshop in which professionals with different skill sets collaborate on specific projects that explore scholarship both within and beyond the realm of traditional publishing. First forged in the 2014 Scholarly Communications Institute, this simple but radical approach to publishing responds to the multimodal scholarship that is being produced today. The approach integrates traditional books and articles within a larger publishing ecosystem that includes other outputs, such as archives of raw data, online community resources, digital artifacts, and alternative modes of presentation.

Today’s scholars are producing work in many forms, from blogs and articles to interactive maps and dataset visualizations; their work incorporates cultural heritage collections, photographs, sound, video, and physical and virtual exhibits. Publishing Makerspace embraces the work of digital librarians, archivists, experts in mapping and visualization, data miners, designers, editors, software developers, and others in a collaborative spirit. In this session, members of the Publishing Makerspace working group will describe the genesis of their idea, provide an update on its development in practice, and suggest some possibly new ways that librarians, publishers, vendors, and everyone who has a stake in scholarly communication can participate in creating a responsive, relevant, and robust future for scholarly publishing. Our aim is to stimulate ideas for the development of these collaborative relationships and innovative publishing formats.

Speakers
avatar for Sylvia Miller

Sylvia Miller

Senior Program Manager, Consortium of Humanities Centers and Institutes, Duke University
avatar for David Phillips

David Phillips

Associate Professor Program in Interdisciplinary Humanities Core Faculty, Entrepreneurship and Women's, Gender and Sexua, Wake Forest University


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Ashley Room, Courtyard Marriott

11:30am EST

The Paper Chase: How One Library Tackled the Chaos of Media Acquisitions
For years, orders for Media formats would come to the staff in Acquisitions a variety of ways. The most common way was to receive scraps of paper with handwritten information. For Media, the Media librarian would usually email the searcher with the information or provide a piece of paper with just a list of titles.
This session will discuss how staff from Acquisitions, Reserves, Media, Cataloging and Circulation came together to design a system to track ordering requests, using Microsoft Access. The system was designed to first handle Reserves ordering and then modified to handle Media orders. In 2014, Acquisitions decided to try using RMAD (Reserves Media Acquisitions Database) to capture more information in order to eliminate the printing of paper for the Media orders.
The Media Librarian enters the DVD information into RMAD. The searchers in Acquisitions check RMAD daily and create the purchase orders. The searcher enters into RMAD the appropriate URL and the PO number for the order. The Acquisitions Librarian receives an email that orders are ready and checks RMAD, copies the URL into her browser and places the order. The Acquisitions Librarian then updates the RMAD entry to indicate it has been ordered. Once the Media items arrive in the library, the other staff involved in cataloging and processing log into RMAD to update their portion of the workflow. The creation of the RMAD database has been a great success and has both streamlined ordering and eliminated the need for paper

Speakers
CH

Chris Hagan

Electronic Resource Acquisitions and Management Specialist, American University Library
avatar for Stacey Marien

Stacey Marien

Acquisitions Librarian, American University
Shelf Ready, ebooks. Gardening, cooking!



Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Cypress Ballroom North, Courtyard Marriott

11:30am EST

Three Heads are Better than One: Organizational Changes in Collection Management Leadership
Financial pressures, shrinking staff, shifting user expectations, and advances in format access and availability mean that organizational change seems to have become a constant in today’s academic library. The area of collection management has not been immune from change; the increasing emphasis on electronic formats, questions about access versus ownership and the rise of open access have all required adjustment in managing collections. Even with all this change, most academic libraries have retained an organizational structure with a single person serving as a collection management coordinator and/or decision maker. This presentation details the shift in one academic library from a hierarchal model with a single collection manager overseeing all selectors to a collection management team composed of three peer selectors representing the major areas of humanities, sciences, and social sciences. The team is charged with coordinating the collection and liaison activities of all selectors as well as investigating new collections initiatives, serving as a bridge between reference and technical services, developing a culture of assessment in collection development, and working with the collections budget, the Libraries’ development office and administration. Benefits realized, challenges encountered, and “lessons learned” from this team approach will be discussed and suggestions for implementation in other libraries will be proposed.

Speakers
avatar for Barbara Bishop

Barbara Bishop

Librarian for Communication, Journalism & Theatre, Auburn University Libraries
avatar for Adelia Grabowsky

Adelia Grabowsky

Health Sciences Librarian, Auburn University Libraries
avatar for Liza Weisbrod

Liza Weisbrod

Librarian, Auburn University Libraries


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Pinckney Room, Francis Marion Hotel

11:30am EST

True Impact: A New Paradigm for Assessing User Value
Historically, libraries approached resource acquisition with a lens of “Volume Assessment”, where the focus was to provide as many resources at the least possible cost to meet the unpredictable demand of patrons. Key metrics for assessment were volume and cost (e.g. cost per item). Today, we find ourselves firmly in a time of “ROI Assessment” where, with the wealth of analytics and assessment tools available, we introduce a perspective of “value” into our assessment of resources (e.g. cost per access / use, etc).

But what of the future? We foresee a new era of “Engagement Assessment” emerging, that more accurately gauges the true impact or “value” to our end users (e.g. cost per engaged use). Our current ROI metrics tell us if someone used a resource, but not how they used it, why they used it, and what impact it had on them.

Speakers
avatar for Tom Humphrey

Tom Humphrey

Director of Sales & Strategy, Kanopy
NQ

Ned Quist

Associate University Librarian for Research and Outreach Services, Brown University
avatar for Trey Shelton

Trey Shelton

E-Resources Librarian, George A. Smathers Libraries, University of Florida
I am the E-Resources & Acqusitions Librarian at the George A. Smathers Libraries at the University of Florida. I have been with the Smathers Libraries since 2010, and in my current role since 2012. I received my MLS from the University of South Florida in 2009. My primary research... Read More →


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Grand Ballroom 2, Gaillard Center

11:30am EST

Weeding Out in the Open: What Will the Neighbors Think?
Weeding is often an emotionally charged topic for both librarians and faculty. A print collection needs weeding, but the campus community is nervous and concerned. Where do we go from here? In preparing for a large scale monograph deselection project at California State University, Fullerton’s (CSUF) Pollak Library, library faculty and administration grappled with how to productively and efficiently involve the large CSUF teaching faculty in the weeding process. Library systems staff developed an innovative web-based tool that enables faculty to easily provide feedback on deselection candidates on a title by title basis. The presenters will explain the thoughts behind the project, the creation of the deselection database and user interface, how the weeding project was received by teaching faculty, and the pros and cons of Pollak Library’s approach. Attendees will be engaged in discussion on faculty participation in library deselection, solutions for communication, and ways to address the uneasiness attached to weeding projects.

Speakers
avatar for Michael DeMars

Michael DeMars

Systems and Instruction Librarian, California State University, Fullerton
avatar for Ann Roll

Ann Roll

Associate Dean of Collections and Scholarly Comm, California State University Fullerton


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Salon 1, Gaillard Center

11:30am EST

Workflows for Managing New Library Data
What separates mediocre university libraries from the great ones? We all use similar repository solutions such as DSpace and Fedora. We all use similar resource indexing software like Summon. We all promote the use of open source solutions which are frequently supported through university forum groups. Yet at the end of the day some universities are just better at implementing and using the resources available to libraries. Maybe the universities that excel at implementation and use of new resources are better staffed or have more money to spend on training. However, it is my belief that the effectiveness of a library to implement changes can be gauged by the workflows they use when implementing changes. My goal is to uncover the impact well established workflows have in the management process of library resources when implementing the use of new technology within a library.

At Virginia Tech we have been working to implement a new discovery interface for geospatial data and are also developing a new way of tracking purchased data sets. Using these projects as a platform to begin conversation with the conference audience, it is my hope to reveal the best practices other universities are using and provoke further thought in how libraries can better share their workflows.

Speakers
SC

Shane Coleman

Data Curator, Virginia Tech


Saturday November 7, 2015 11:30am - 12:00pm EST
Gold Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

12:30pm EST

Closing Session and End of Conference Poll-a-Palooza: Part II
Do you find yourself brimming with questions, new found opinions, and a renewed spark for librarianship at the close of the Charleston conference?  Before you head back to your library to share your experiences, join us for a lively wrap-up session.  The presenter will use Poll Everywhere to create immediate data visualizations of audience answers to various key issues significant to libraries and content providers.The session will include questions relevant to the 2015 Charleston conference, as well as questions submitted through the Charleston website.  Topics will vary based on conference sessions and attendee submissions.  The presenter will create a fun, open atmosphere by interspersing library-related questions with some wildcards, such as “what is your favorite restaurant in Charleston” or “which author would you most like to meet in the Francis Marion lobby”? This session will be entertaining, animated, and informative, all in the spirit of conference camaraderie.  Attendees will be inspired to interact with one another and to contemplate on their experiences at Charleston.  They will gain insight and knowledge into how their views compare with those of their peers, and they will leave feeling energized and more confident in the awareness that they are not alone in their opinions.  There is a sense of solidarity that comes from participating in group discourse, and the use of Poll Everywhere will facilitate this effectively. 

Following the Poll-a-palloza, Derek Law will give an end-of-conference summary. 

Speakers
avatar for Erin Gallagher

Erin Gallagher

Director of Collection Services, Reed College
Erin Gallagher is the Director of Collection Services at Reed College in lovely Portland, Oregon. Before that, she worked as the E-Resources & Serials Librarian at Rollins College in beautiful Orlando, Florida. Erin started her library career on the vendor side as a collection development... Read More →
avatar for Derek Law

Derek Law

Professor Emeritus, University of Strathclyde
Derek Law is Emeritus Professor of Informatics at the University of Strathclyde. He was chair of the JISC Advance Board and has worked in several British universities and has published and spoken at conferences extensively. He is a regular project evaluator for the EU and has undertaken... Read More →


Saturday November 7, 2015 12:30pm - 1:30pm EST
Colonial Ballroom, Francis Marion Hotel

3:00pm EST

Civil War Walking Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

Broad Street Tours will be offering walking tours again this year.  Lee Ann Bain and Carol Ezell-Gilson will be your guides.  The daytime tours are two hours in length and cover about a mile distance.  

Participants will learn of personalities and events leading up to the Ordinance of Secession, signed in Charleston on December 20, 1860, effectively dissolving the Union. Charleston was the largest slave port in North America, its waterfront the location of numerous slave auctions. Visitors will gain understanding into the state’s economy and its determination (at the time) to preserve the institution of slavery. Fort Sumter provides backdrop to hear of the start of the War, the siege of Charleston (1863-1865), and the eventual fall of the city.

For more information on all tours check out http://broadstreetbiz.com/walking-tours/charleston-conference-2015/.  Tours are $20.00 per person and payment may be made with cash or check at tour time.  Reservations are required as tour groups are limited to 20 people.

Saturday November 7, 2015 3:00pm - 5:00pm EST
TBA

3:00pm EST

General History Walking Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

Broad Street Tours will be offering walking tours again this year.  Lee Ann Bain and Carol Ezell-Gilson will be your guides.  The daytime tours are two hours in length and cover about a mile distance.  

This tour gives a general overview of Charleston’s history from the colonial era onward – through the Revolutionary War, the Civil War, to the city’s rediscovery and revitalization of the past 40 years. Participants will gain insight into Charleston’s early wealth and culture, viewing the city’s impressive public buildings and private mansions. Visitors will learn of architectural influences and other factors that resulted in modifications to original structures, with explanation of the single house, the double house and dependencies.

For more information on all tours check out http://broadstreetbiz.com/walking-tours/charleston-conference-2015/.  Tours are $20.00 per person and payment may be made with cash or check at tour time.  Reservations are required as tour groups are limited to 20 people.

Saturday November 7, 2015 3:00pm - 5:00pm EST
TBA

7:00pm EST

Ghostly Stroll Walking Tour
Limited Capacity seats available

Broad Street Tours will be offering walking tours again this year.  Lee Ann Bain and Carol Ezell-Gilson will be your guides.  

Charleston is believed to be a most haunted place. The city has experienced numerous natural and manmade disasters in its long history; stories and legends of great fear, suffering, and death abound. The historic district with hundreds of old buildings provides familiar settings for spirits to revisit and haunt. Charleston, called the “Holy City”, is known for its beautiful historic churches – whose graveyards hold many secrets and horrors. Beguiling tales will take you back to a time when life was tenuous, survival uncertain. Come hear legends from the past and take in the beautiful ambiance of Charleston at night. (1 1/2 hour tour)

For more information on all tours check out http://broadstreetbiz.com/walking-tours/charleston-conference-2015/.  Tours are $20.00 per person and payment may be made with cash or check at tour time.  Reservations are required as tour groups are limited to 20 people.

Saturday November 7, 2015 7:00pm - 8:30pm EST
TBA
 
Wednesday, November 2
 

10:30am EDT

Refreshment Break
Join us for a refreshment break to celebrate the opening of the Vendor Showcase! Visit booths and browse while you eat. Food and beverage stations will be scattered throughout the entire Showcase at the Francis Marion Hotel, and will be provided for preconferences scheduled at the Courtyard Marriott as well.

Wednesday November 2, 2016 10:30am - 11:00am EDT
TBA
 
Thursday, November 3
 

9:15am EDT

 
Friday, November 4
 

7:30am EDT

8:30am EDT

Announcements and Opening Remarks
Speakers
avatar for Katina Strauch

Katina Strauch

Founder and Convener, Charleston Conference


Friday November 4, 2016 8:30am - 8:35am EDT
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

8:35am EDT

9:10am EDT

Hyde Park Debate - Resolved: APC-funded open access is antithetical to the values of librarianship
In Favor: Alison Scott, UC Riverside
Opposed: Michael Levine-Clark, University of Denver

The debate will be conducted in general accordance with Oxford Union rules. All in the audience will vote their opinion on the resolution before the debate begins, and the vote totals will be recorded. Each speaker will offer a formal opening statement, followed by a response to each other's statements, and then we'll open the floor to discussion. At the conclusion of the debate, another vote will be taken. The winner of the debate is the one who caused the most audience members to change their votes. Members of the audience have an opportunity to make comments and pose questions as well. Join us for what is sure to be a lively discussion, and come ready to share your opinions!

Moderators
avatar for Rick Anderson

Rick Anderson

Assoc. Dean for Collections & Schol Comm, University of Utah

Speakers
avatar for Michael Levine-Clark

Michael Levine-Clark

Dean of Libraries, University of Denver


Friday November 4, 2016 9:10am - 9:55am EDT
Performance Hall, Gaillard Center

9:55am EDT

11:35am EDT

Friday Morning Concurrent Session
Specifics will be posted soon.

Friday November 4, 2016 11:35am - 12:15pm EDT
TBA
 

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